This application is a revised submission for a 5-year competitive continuation to grant 1R01-DA015269, Gender Identity and HIV Risk. The long-range goal of our research is to reduce HIV transmission among individuals stigmatized for their gender nonconformity and diversity, a goal consistent with the Healthy People 2010 objective to reduce the nation's health disparities. Key findings from our prior work were: a) a national sample of these individuals can be effectively reached via the Internet;b) differences in sex, gender identity/role, and sexual orientation are associated with important differences in HIV risk behavior;c) individuals in the female role are particularly vulnerable to HIV infection through the high risk behavior of the men with whom they interact. We propose to build on these findings by investigating the HIV risk behavior and cofactors of this population's high risk male partners (N=400), using online survey and interview methods successfully applied in the original project (Aim 1). These results will help inform the development of a theory- driven, Internet-based, HIV prevention intervention for individuals who are stigmatized for their gender non- conformity (Aim 2). The intervention will be modeled on an offline HIV intervention shown, in an uncontrolled trial, to reduce risk behavior in the target population. After user-testing and refinement of the prototype online intervention, we will conduct a randomized controlled trial (N=600) to evaluate its efficacy in improving health and reducing HIV risk behavior (Aim 3). This study is innovative in that a) few interventions exist for this minority population and even fewer have been adequately evaluated;b) the intervention will combine HIV prevention and behavior change theories with principles of e-learning;c) the entire study will be implemented online. Our team is highly experienced in HIV prevention research with diverse and vulnerable populations, the benefits/challenges of Internet-based research (online recruitment, data collection, intervention adaptation), and sexual health theory and measures. The project has public health significance in that the minority population targeted for intervention is at high risk for HIV infection, and the men with whom they interact not only pose a risk to them, but also to the general population. If proven effective, the online intervention can be implemented with little additional cost to reduce gender-related HIV risks on a large scale, nationally and internationally, even among highly stigmatized groups.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01HD057595-07
Application #
7848992
Study Section
Behavioral and Social Science Approaches to Preventing HIV/AIDS Study Section (BSPH)
Program Officer
Newcomer, Susan
Project Start
2001-09-30
Project End
2012-04-30
Budget Start
2010-05-01
Budget End
2011-04-30
Support Year
7
Fiscal Year
2010
Total Cost
$574,377
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Minnesota Twin Cities
Department
Family Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
555917996
City
Minneapolis
State
MN
Country
United States
Zip Code
55455
Jackman, Kasey B; Dolezal, Curtis; Bockting, Walter O (2018) Generational Differences in Internalized Transnegativity and Psychological Distress Among Feminine Spectrum Transgender People. LGBT Health 5:54-60
Gonzalez, Cesar A; Gallego, Joseph D; Bockting, Walter O (2017) Demographic Characteristics, Components of Sexuality and Gender, and Minority Stress and Their Associations to Excessive Alcohol, Cannabis, and Illicit (Noncannabis) Drug Use Among a Large Sample of Transgender People in the United States. J Prim Prev 38:419-445
Teitcher, Jennifer E F; Bockting, Walter O; Bauermeister, José A et al. (2015) Detecting, preventing, and responding to ""fraudsters"" in internet research: ethics and tradeoffs. J Law Med Ethics 43:116-33
Wilkerson, J Michael; Iantaffi, Alex; Grey, Jeremy A et al. (2014) Recommendations for internet-based qualitative health research with hard-to-reach populations. Qual Health Res 24:561-74
Horvath, Keith J; Iantaffi, Alex; Swinburne-Romine, Rebecca et al. (2014) A comparison of mental health, substance use, and sexual risk behaviors between rural and non-rural transgender persons. J Homosex 61:1117-30
Feldman, Jamie; Romine, Rebecca Swinburne; Bockting, Walter O (2014) HIV risk behaviors in the U.S. transgender population: prevalence and predictors in a large internet sample. J Homosex 61:1558-88
Grey, Jeremy A; Robinson, Beatrice Bean E; Coleman, Eli et al. (2013) A systematic review of instruments that measure attitudes toward homosexual men. J Sex Res 50:329-52
Bockting, Walter O; Miner, Michael H; Swinburne Romine, Rebecca E et al. (2013) Stigma, mental health, and resilience in an online sample of the US transgender population. Am J Public Health 103:943-51
Horvath, Keith J; Iantaffi, Alex; Grey, Jeremy A et al. (2012) A review of the content and format of transgender-related webpages. Health Commun 27:457-66
Miner, Michael H; Bockting, Walter O; Romine, Rebecca Swinburne et al. (2012) Conducting Internet Research With the Transgender Population: Reaching Broad Samples and Collecting Valid Data. Soc Sci Comput Rev 30:202-211

Showing the most recent 10 out of 11 publications