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BACKGROUND The heightened HIV vulnerability associated with men who have sex with men (MSM) and find sex online in Western and East Asian countries may pose similar concerns for MSM in Southeast Asia. However, this line of research has been underexamined among Southeast Asian MSM, especially in Southeast Asian cities with a high HIV prevalence among young MSM, such as Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. OBJECTIVE To characterize the sexual behavioral and psychosocial correlates of online sex seeking in a sample of largely gay-identified young MSM in Ho Chi Minh City (HCMC), Vietnam. To examine the relationships between social support, outness, and last condomless anal sex, but not PrEP or ART. The analysis included specific attention paid to the use of different types of online sex platforms, which may contribute to the understanding of online sexual seeking. METHODS Patterns of online sexual seeking in a cross-sectional sample of YMSM (N=1005) were identified using latent class analysis (LCA). Multinomial logistic regressions and Poisson regressions with robust variance were used to estimate the associations between patterns of online sex seeking and other participant characteristics. RESULTS We found four latent classes of MSM with distinct profiles of online platform use for sex seeking: 1) “negligible app users,” 2) “gay app users,” 3) “poly app users,” and 4) “low-cost app users.” Patterns of online sex seeking moderated the protective effects of social support and outness on last condomless anal sex, but not on PrEP or ART. When stratified by levels of social support and outness, only gay app users were associated with a protective effect on last condomless anal sex but not on PrEP or ART when social support and outness were high. Low-cost app users were marginally associated with a higher prevalence of condomless anal sex but not with PrEP or ART when the level of outness was low. CONCLUSIONS Vietnamese YMSM who find sex partners online have distinct patterns of app use, with contrasting sexual and psychosocial health burdens that indicate online sex seeking as a socially patterned behavior. HIV prevention programs and tailored digital interventions should consider the different exposures to social influences associated with patterns of social networking app use as they could moderate the effectiveness of the delivered programs and interventions in reducing YMSM’s HIV vulnerability.
BACKGROUND The heightened HIV vulnerability associated with men who have sex with men (MSM) and find sex online in Western and East Asian countries may pose similar concerns for MSM in Southeast Asia. However, this line of research has been underexamined among Southeast Asian MSM, especially in Southeast Asian cities with a high HIV prevalence among young MSM, such as Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. OBJECTIVE To characterize the sexual behavioral and psychosocial correlates of online sex seeking in a sample of largely gay-identified young MSM in Ho Chi Minh City (HCMC), Vietnam. To examine the relationships between social support, outness, and last condomless anal sex, but not PrEP or ART. The analysis included specific attention paid to the use of different types of online sex platforms, which may contribute to the understanding of online sexual seeking. METHODS Patterns of online sexual seeking in a cross-sectional sample of YMSM (N=1005) were identified using latent class analysis (LCA). Multinomial logistic regressions and Poisson regressions with robust variance were used to estimate the associations between patterns of online sex seeking and other participant characteristics. RESULTS We found four latent classes of MSM with distinct profiles of online platform use for sex seeking: 1) “negligible app users,” 2) “gay app users,” 3) “poly app users,” and 4) “low-cost app users.” Patterns of online sex seeking moderated the protective effects of social support and outness on last condomless anal sex, but not on PrEP or ART. When stratified by levels of social support and outness, only gay app users were associated with a protective effect on last condomless anal sex but not on PrEP or ART when social support and outness were high. Low-cost app users were marginally associated with a higher prevalence of condomless anal sex but not with PrEP or ART when the level of outness was low. CONCLUSIONS Vietnamese YMSM who find sex partners online have distinct patterns of app use, with contrasting sexual and psychosocial health burdens that indicate online sex seeking as a socially patterned behavior. HIV prevention programs and tailored digital interventions should consider the different exposures to social influences associated with patterns of social networking app use as they could moderate the effectiveness of the delivered programs and interventions in reducing YMSM’s HIV vulnerability.
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