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The Urban Environment and Sexual Risk Behavior among Men who have Sex with Men
Frye, Victoria; Latka, Mary H.; Koblin, Beryl; Halkitis, Perry N.; Putnam, Sara; Galea, Sandro; Vlahov, David
2006
Abstract: Increasingly, studies show that characteristics of the urban environment
influence a wide variety of health behaviors and disease outcomes, yet few studies have
focused on the sexual risk behaviors of men who have sex with men (MSM). This focus
is important as many gay men reside in or move to urban areas, and sexual risk
behaviors and associated outcomes have increased among some urban MSM in recent
years. As interventions aimed at changing individual-level risk behaviors have shown
mainly short-term effects, consideration of broader environmental influences is needed.
Previous efforts to assess the influence of environmental characteristics on sexual
behaviors and related health outcomes among the general population have generally
applied three theories as explanatory models: physical disorder, social disorganization
and social norms theories. In these models, the intervening mechanisms specified to
link environmental characteristics to individual-level outcomes include stress, collective
efficacy, and social influence processes, respectively. Whether these models can be
empirically supported in generating inferences about the sexual behavior of urban
MSM is underdeveloped. Conceptualizing sexual risk among MSM to include social
and physical environmental characteristics provides a basis for generating novel and
holistic disease prevention and health promotion interventions.