Abstract

Young Black and Latino sexual minority men (YBLSM) exhibit disproportionately high rates of negative sexual health outcomes, including HIV and other sexually transmitted infections, compared to other groups, partly due to relatively higher rates of exposure to a host of socio-structural risk factors (e.g., unstable housing and under-employment). However, an under-studied interpersonal resource exists for many YBLSM, non-parental adults (NPAs, i.e., adults who act as role models and provide social support), who may be able to influence contextual (e.g., unemployment) and individual (e.g., reduced health expectations) factors underlying sexual health disparities.Aims: This study sought to examine the role of NPAs in factors that affect sexual health behaviors and in supporting those health behaviors directly, among YBLSM living in a mid-sized city in the southern United States. A total of n=20 participants, n=10 YBLSM (ages 16 to 22), and n=10 NPAs (ages 26 to 52) were interviewed using semi-structured guides to examine NPA involvement in the lives of YBLSM from both sides of the relationship. The research team used a framework analysis approach to iteratively identify and define meaningful codes and sub-codes. Both YBLSM and NPAs described NPAs helping YBLSM through role modeling and social support in a variety of areas found to affect sexual health behaviors, such as housing instability and psychological distress, as well as in specific behaviors, such as condom use and HIV medication adherence. Given the multiple socio-structural obstacles facing YBLSM and their multifaceted relationships with NPAs, NPAs may be a promising resource to help address these impediments to health. Partnering more intentionally with NPAs is a potentially promising strategy to help reduce HIV-related disparities affecting YBLSM that is worthy of additional empirical attention.

Highlights

  • Young Black and Latino sexual minority men (YBLSM) face disproportionate rates of negative sexual health indicators

  • YBLSM varied in the number of non-parental adults (NPAs) they reported being in their lives, most described one to three NPAs who were most influential

  • Four YBLSM participants described at least one relationship with an NPA who enrolled in the second phase of the study

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Summary

Introduction

Young Black and Latino sexual minority men (YBLSM) face disproportionate rates of negative sexual health indicators. In 2019, among sexual minority men ages 13 to 24, YBLSM made up 81% of new HIV diagnoses (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2019). The rate of STDs among all Black Americans is five to eight times the rate of White Americans, and the rate among Latinx Americans is one to two times higher than that of White Americans (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2021). Some evidence suggests ethnic minority LGBT youth experience disruptions in relationships with parents at even higher rates than Caucasian LGBT youth. A recent study found that both ethnic minority parents and their sexual minority adolescent children reported higher rates of parental rejection in response to sexual minority orientation disclosure than Caucasian parents and their sexual minority adolescents (Richter et al, 2017). The majority of LGBT youth have faced sexual orientation-related victimization in high school from peers, both blatantly and in the forms of more subtle microaggressions, and ethnic minority LGBT youth face both sexual orientation and race-based discrimination (Jamil et al, 2009; Baricevic and Kashubeck-West, 2019; Truong et al, 2020)

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