Abstract

BackgroundInhaled nitrites are commonly used by men who have sex with men (MSM) in western countries. As such compounds are not illicit, they are widely available in China. Recent studies have documented a high prevalence of inhaled nitrites use in this population. MethodsSnowball sampling was used to recruit 576 MSM in Beijing, China, who completed an anonymous face-to-face interview. ResultsOf the participants, 49.8% had heard of “Rush” or “inhaled nitrites”. The prevalence of use in the last three months was 28.3% among all participants and 56.8% among those with awareness about the compounds. A stepwise model found that age group (26–35 years old, ORm=3.91; ≤25 years old, ORm=3.05; reference group: >35 years old, P<0.01) and multiple male sex partnerships (ORm=2.29, P<0.01) were associated with inhaled nitrites use. Adjusted for these two variables, constructs based on the Health Belief Model (HBM) were significantly associated with inhaled nitrites use in the last three months: Perceived Severity Scale [Adjusted Odds Ratios (AOR) =0.72, P<0.001], the Perceived Benefit Scale (AOR=1.20, P<0.001), the Perceived Barrier Scale (AOR=0.81, P<0.01), the Cue to Action Scale (AOR=1.45, P<0.001), and the Perceived Self-efficacy Scale (AOR=0.71, P<0.001). ConclusionsThe prevalence of inhaled nitrites use was high. It may further increase sharply among MSM in China when awareness becomes more common. Cognitive variables derived from the HBM provided a useful framework for designing interventions at structural, inter-personal and individual levels. Policy changes should also be considered.

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