Journal of adolescence | 2021

Brief report: Identified barriers and proposed solutions for recruiting young Black sexual minority men in HIV-related research.

 
 

Abstract


INTRODUCTION\nYoung Black sexual minority men represent a high priority population for HIV prevention research yet the existing literature is not proportional to the current health disparity observed. The challenge of engaging this intersectional population in research on a stigmatized topic likely contributes to the dearth of literature.\n\n\nMETHODS\nThis brief report examines the current recruitment strategies for engaging sexual minority men in HIV-related research and identifies individual and system-level barriers that contribute to the underrepresentation of Black sexual minority men in HIV-related research. Qualitative data is integrated from Project HATCH (Helping African American Teens Combat HIV), an ongoing recruitment effort of 14-21-year-old Black sexual minority men in Washington D.C., United States.\n\n\nRESULTS\nIdentified barriers to recruiting young Black sexual minority men include cultural stigma, mistrust of research institutions, the coming out process for queer youth, assent procedures for youth, and others.\n\n\nCONCLUSIONS\nWe propose several solutions for recruitment including geospatial technology, social media, and community spaces of trust (i.e., churches and schools). Additional larger scale solutions include destigmatizing youths sexuality and prioritizing the advancement of Black scholars in academia and research endeavors.

Volume 87
Pages \n 1-5\n
DOI 10.1016/j.adolescence.2020.12.011
Language English
Journal Journal of adolescence

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