Overlapping Epidemics, Innovative Interventions: How Do Psychosocial "Syndemics" Drive HIV Among Gay Men - And What Can We Do About It? • Call Recording and Presentations Now Available
Download call recording and presentations here: mp3 file • Ron Stall: slides • Jim Pickett: slides
Researchers and community activists urge government and providers to:
- confront pervasive violence in the lives of adolescent LGBT people;
- provide comprehensive programs that do not fragment services needed by those in the heart of syndemics; and
- commit to addressing disproportionate rates of HIV in gay men, including African American gay men who have the highest rates despite equal or lower rates of "risky behavior".
Over 100 participants joined a CHAMP community teleconference on
June 24 to discuss a theory of "syndemics" that suggests how
inter-connected epidemics of psychosocial health issues drive HIV among
gay men.
The call offered compelling data showing how psychological and social
health conditions - particularly violence and marginalization -
contribute to the HIV epidemic among gay men and presented
groundbreaking models for countering these epidemics by standing up for
gay lives and fostering stronger communities.
Dr. Ron Stall of the University of Pittsburgh introduced the syndemics
approach to HIV prevention among gay men. He showed how high levels of
substance abuse, partner violence, childhood sexual abuse and
depression among gay men drastically increases gay men's susceptibility
to HIV. He called out for an end to attacks from the religious right
that cite troubling statistics on gay men's health, explaining that
they are blaming the victims of the very violence and bias that has
been sanctioned by their bigotry.
Jim Pickett of the AIDS Foundation of Chicago presented programs --
Project CRYSP, Lifelube, and the Gay Men's Health Summit -- that
depart from traditional models of individual interventions or efforts
that focus on just one area of gay men's lives -- to confront the
conditions that feed the syndemic and increase vulnerability to HIV,
while building resilience and resourcefulness in gay communities.
Call moderator Mark McLaurin of CHAMP urged researchers to address how
syndemics theory could explain the higher and disproportionate rates of
HIV in American gay men compared to all gay men - despite the fact
that surveillance data do not reveal higher rates of risk behaviors
among Black gay men compared to white gay men.

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Thanks CHAMP, Ron, Mark, and
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