4.3 Article

Beliefs about personal and partner responsibility among HIV-Seropositive men who have sex with men:: Measurement and association with transmission risk behavior

Journal

AIDS AND BEHAVIOR
Volume 11, Issue 5, Pages 676-686

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10461-006-9183-6

Keywords

responsibility; attributions; HIV prevention; homosexuality; male; HIV seropositivity; sex behavior

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Beliefs of people living with HIV about their own responsibility for preventing HIV transmission (personal responsibility) and their sex partners' responsibility for protecting themselves (partner responsibility) are poorly understood. A sample of 1163 HIV-seropositive men who have sex with men (MSM; 55% men of color) completed an A-CASI assessment of sexual behavior and psychosocial measures. A two-dimensional model that represents four orientations toward responsibility was tested: (1) self-high personal and low partner responsibility, (2) other-low personal and high partner responsibility, (3) shared-high personal and high partner responsibility, and (4) diminished-low personal and low partner responsibility. As predicted, the self-responsibility group demonstrated the lowest risk of HIV transmission; the other responsibility group had the highest risk. Intermediate risk was observed in the shared and diminished responsibility groups. Implications for future research and HIV prevention efforts are discussed.

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