Persistence of Intimate Partner Violence and Its Relationship to HIV Prevention Behaviors and Attitudes: A Longitudinal Study of Coupled Sexual Minority Men
Erik D. Storholm, Jessica L. Randazzo, Daniel Siconolfi, Glenn J. Wagner

TL;DR
This study explores how ongoing intimate partner violence affects HIV prevention behaviors and attitudes among coupled sexual minority men over time.
Contribution
The study is one of the first longitudinal investigations into the relationship between intimate partner violence and HIV prevention among coupled sexual minority men.
Findings
Persistent intimate partner violence was linked to lower perceived partner support for PrEP use and greater PrEP stigma.
Persistent intimate partner violence was associated with more frequent HIV testing.
Sexual agreements for non-monogamy influenced the relationship between intimate partner violence and HIV prevention behaviors in complex ways.
Abstract
Attitudes toward and use of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) by coupled sexual minority men (SMM) may be influenced by exposure to intimate partner violence (IPV) and sexual agreements regarding non-monogamy. We examined IPV (victimization and perpetration) persistence over 12 months and its association with HIV prevention behaviors and attitudes among 271 coupled, HIV-negative SMM, and the moderating role of sexual agreements. The sample had diverse race/ethnicity (64% were non-White) and was from across all regions of the USA. Participants completed a self-administered, Web-based survey at baseline, 6 months, and 12 months, and reported having the same main partner throughout. Repeated measures regression analysis showed that the level of IPV persistence was unrelated to PrEP use; however, persistent (i.e., present at all three assessments) IPV victimization and perpetration both…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIntimate Partner and Family Violence · HIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health
