A Cross-Sectional Study on Attitudes to and Understanding of Risk of Acquisition of HIV: Design, Methods and Participant Characteristics.

Janey Sewell ORCID logo; Andrew Speakman ORCID logo; Andrew N Phillips ORCID logo; Fiona C Lampe ORCID logo; Ada Miltz ORCID logo; Richard Gilson ORCID logo; David Asboe ORCID logo; Nneka Nwokolo ORCID logo; Christopher Scott ORCID logo; Sara Day ORCID logo; +21 more... Martin Fisher; Amanda Clarke ORCID logo; Jane Anderson ORCID logo; Rebecca O'Connell ORCID logo; Vanessa Apea ORCID logo; Rageshri Dhairyawan ORCID logo; Mark Gompels ORCID logo; Paymaneh Farazmand ORCID logo; Sris Allan ORCID logo; Susan Mann ORCID logo; Jyoti Dhar ORCID logo; Alan Tang ORCID logo; S Tariq Sadiq ORCID logo; Stephen Taylor ORCID logo; Simon Collins ORCID logo; Lorraine Sherr ORCID logo; Graham Hart ORCID logo; Anne M Johnson ORCID logo; Alec Miners ORCID logo; Jonathan Elford ORCID logo; Alison Rodger ORCID logo; (2016) A Cross-Sectional Study on Attitudes to and Understanding of Risk of Acquisition of HIV: Design, Methods and Participant Characteristics. JMIR research protocols, 5 (2). e58-. ISSN 1929-0748 DOI: 10.2196/resprot.4873
Copy

BACKGROUND: The annual number of new human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infections in the United Kingdom among men who have sex with men (MSM) has risen, and remains high among heterosexuals. Increasing HIV transmission among MSM is consistent with evidence of ongoing sexual risk behavior in this group, and targeted prevention strategies are needed for those at risk of acquiring HIV. OBJECTIVE: The Attitudes to and Understanding of Risk of Acquisition of HIV (AURAH) study was designed to collect information on HIV negative adults at risk of HIV infection in the United Kingdom, based on the following parameters: physical and mental health, lifestyle, patterns of sexual behaviour, and attitudes to sexual risk. METHODS: Cross-sectional questionnaire study of HIV negative or undiagnosed sexual health clinic attendees in the United Kingdom from 2013-2014. RESULTS: Of 2630 participants in the AURAH study, 2064 (78%) were in the key subgroups of interest; 580 were black Africans (325 females and 255 males) and 1484 were MSM, with 27 participants belonging to both categories. CONCLUSIONS: The results from AURAH will be a significant resource to understand the attitudes and sexual behaviour of those at risk of acquiring HIV within the United Kingdom. AURAH will inform future prevention efforts and targeted health promotion initiatives in the HIV negative population.


picture_as_pdf
9d3bbf06b6441576f07dea3a0c406520.pdf
subject
Published Version
Available under Creative Commons: NC-ND 3.0

View Download

Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span Multiline CSV OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL EndNote HTML Citation JSON MARC (ASCII) MARC (ISO 2709) METS MODS RDF+N3 RDF+N-Triples RDF+XML RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer Simple Metadata ASCII Citation EP3 XML
Export

Downloads