Can platform use patterns be an indicator of HIV-related risk and sub-group heterogeneity among men who have sex with men in Singapore: a latent class analysis
Isabel Tavitian-Exley, Ying Hao, Mark I-C. Chen, Chen Seong Wong, Chronos Kwok, Matthias Paul Han Sim Toh

TL;DR
This study explores how different patterns of platform use among men who have sex with men in Singapore can indicate HIV risk and help tailor targeted interventions.
Contribution
The study introduces latent class analysis to identify distinct platform use patterns linked to HIV risk behaviors among men who have sex with men.
Findings
Five distinct platform use patterns were identified, each associated with different HIV risk behaviors.
Men in sauna-centric and multiple-platform classes had higher odds of multiple sex partners and group sex.
Alcohol/drug use during sex and group sex were independently linked to condomless sex and recent HIV testing.
Abstract
Low-level HIV epidemic settings like Singapore face the challenge of reaching men at-risk who have less contact with programmes. We investigated patterns of meeting platform use by men seeking male sexual partners (MSM) as potential marker of risk to differentiate sub-groups for interventions. Latent Class Analysis (LCA) was applied to a survey sample of MSM recruited from bars/clubs, saunas and a smartphone application, using purposive sampling. The best-fit LCA model which identified homogeneous sub-groups with similar patterns of meeting platform was factored in multivariable regression to identify associations with risk behaviors on the pathway to HIV infection. Overall 1,141 MSM were recruited from bars/clubs (n = 426), saunas (n = 531), and online (n = 184). Five patterns emerged, reflecting salient platform use characteristics: Sauna-centric (SC; n = 413), App-centric (AC; n =…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · HIV, Drug Use, Sexual Risk · Sex work and related issues
