Abstract

The ANRS 14058 Ganymede study aims to determine the proportion post-migration HIV-seroconversion in a sample of HIV-positive men having sex with men (MSM) born outside of France and receiving medical care in Paris region (Île-de-France). The study, based on a self-questionnaire, is also focused on the life course of these MSM before, during and after the migration process. The paper refers to a qualitative exploratory study, taking place as a prerequisite for the Ganymede study, in order to refine its questionnaire. The purpose of these interviews was also to explore the migratory motivations and experiences, the sexual biography, and the health history, of a sample of seropositive MSM born outside of France, and to illustrate the diversity of this epidemiological category. Forteen respondents participated in the interview study. Nine of them have learned of their HIV-positive status after having emigrated to France. None of the respondents mentioned a major barrier to medical care access and HIV follow-up. The obstacles they reported were related to the coverage of medical expenses, due to their possible precarious legal and social situation. These men were exposed to the effects of power relations, leading to discrimination and violence, whose wider impacts on health were weakly evoked. Although the findings of the exploratory study are not to be generalized, they illustrate the health issues of the interviewees, and the wide diversity of their biographies and life courses, emphasizing the impact of gender and class power relations as a source of social and health inequalities, and precariousness. They invite therefore to describe this epidemiological category of "MSM born outside of France" in a more heterogeneous way.

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