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“Talking About it Publicly Made Me Feel Both Curious and Embarrassed”: Acceptability, Feasibility, and Appropriateness of a Stigma-Mitigation Training to Increase Health Worker Comfort Discussing Anal Sexuality in HIV Services
by
Meyers, Kathrine
, Kutner, Bryan A
, Wu Yumeng
, Balán, Ivan C
in
Acceptability
/ Bisexuality
/ Broaching
/ Cognitive ability
/ Cognitive responses
/ Comfort
/ Feasibility
/ Gays & lesbians
/ Health
/ Health behavior
/ Health services
/ HIV
/ Human immunodeficiency virus
/ LGBTQ people
/ Medical personnel
/ Medical workers
/ Mens health
/ Mitigation
/ Motivation
/ Participation
/ Physiology
/ Pleasure
/ Professional training
/ Qualitative analysis
/ Safe sexual practices
/ Satisfaction
/ Sex
/ Sexual behavior
/ Sexuality
/ Sexually transmitted diseases
/ Staff participation
/ STD
/ Stigma
/ Talking
/ Time use
/ Trainees
/ Training
/ Uncertainty
/ Workers
2020
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“Talking About it Publicly Made Me Feel Both Curious and Embarrassed”: Acceptability, Feasibility, and Appropriateness of a Stigma-Mitigation Training to Increase Health Worker Comfort Discussing Anal Sexuality in HIV Services
by
Meyers, Kathrine
, Kutner, Bryan A
, Wu Yumeng
, Balán, Ivan C
in
Acceptability
/ Bisexuality
/ Broaching
/ Cognitive ability
/ Cognitive responses
/ Comfort
/ Feasibility
/ Gays & lesbians
/ Health
/ Health behavior
/ Health services
/ HIV
/ Human immunodeficiency virus
/ LGBTQ people
/ Medical personnel
/ Medical workers
/ Mens health
/ Mitigation
/ Motivation
/ Participation
/ Physiology
/ Pleasure
/ Professional training
/ Qualitative analysis
/ Safe sexual practices
/ Satisfaction
/ Sex
/ Sexual behavior
/ Sexuality
/ Sexually transmitted diseases
/ Staff participation
/ STD
/ Stigma
/ Talking
/ Time use
/ Trainees
/ Training
/ Uncertainty
/ Workers
2020
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Do you wish to request the book?
“Talking About it Publicly Made Me Feel Both Curious and Embarrassed”: Acceptability, Feasibility, and Appropriateness of a Stigma-Mitigation Training to Increase Health Worker Comfort Discussing Anal Sexuality in HIV Services
by
Meyers, Kathrine
, Kutner, Bryan A
, Wu Yumeng
, Balán, Ivan C
in
Acceptability
/ Bisexuality
/ Broaching
/ Cognitive ability
/ Cognitive responses
/ Comfort
/ Feasibility
/ Gays & lesbians
/ Health
/ Health behavior
/ Health services
/ HIV
/ Human immunodeficiency virus
/ LGBTQ people
/ Medical personnel
/ Medical workers
/ Mens health
/ Mitigation
/ Motivation
/ Participation
/ Physiology
/ Pleasure
/ Professional training
/ Qualitative analysis
/ Safe sexual practices
/ Satisfaction
/ Sex
/ Sexual behavior
/ Sexuality
/ Sexually transmitted diseases
/ Staff participation
/ STD
/ Stigma
/ Talking
/ Time use
/ Trainees
/ Training
/ Uncertainty
/ Workers
2020
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“Talking About it Publicly Made Me Feel Both Curious and Embarrassed”: Acceptability, Feasibility, and Appropriateness of a Stigma-Mitigation Training to Increase Health Worker Comfort Discussing Anal Sexuality in HIV Services
Journal Article
“Talking About it Publicly Made Me Feel Both Curious and Embarrassed”: Acceptability, Feasibility, and Appropriateness of a Stigma-Mitigation Training to Increase Health Worker Comfort Discussing Anal Sexuality in HIV Services
2020
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Overview
Health workers report challenges to broaching sexual behavior with gay and bisexual men (MSM). We conducted a stigma-mitigation training to increase provider-initiated conversation about anal sexuality among Chinese health workers. The two-day workshop, titled Smarter Sex is the New Safer Sex: Anal Pleasure and Health, coupled information about anal physiology and sexual response with gradual exposure to trainees’ emotional and cognitive responses. We analyzed surveys and one-time interviews. Acceptability (satisfaction with training activities and recommended practices), feasibility (compatibility with participants’ current practices), and appropriateness (perceived fit with participants’ work mission and goals) were high, reaching 84–95% of the scale range, though with variable ratings for trainee comfort during participation. Qualitative data confirm health workers’ motivation to discuss anal sexuality and the value of learning about anal physiology and sexual response, but revealed continued uncertainty about how to broach and navigate discussion with clients. Refinement of the training to align with health worker recommendations and to augment communication options and skills is warranted, as is involvement of MSM clientele themselves.
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