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Featured researches published by Olivier Ferlatte.


Qualitative Health Research | 2018

Photovoice Ethics: Critical Reflections From Men’s Mental Health Research

Genevieve Creighton; John L. Oliffe; Olivier Ferlatte; Joan L. Bottorff; Emily K. Jenkins

As photovoice continues to grow as a method for researching health and illness, there is a need for rigorous discussions about ethical considerations. In this article, we discuss three key ethical issues arising from a recent photovoice study investigating men’s depression and suicide. The first issue, indelible images, details the complexity of consent and copyright when participant-produced photographs are shown at exhibitions and online where they can be copied and disseminated beyond the original scope of the research. The second issue, representation, explores the ethical implications that can arise when participants and others have discordant views about the deceased. The third, vicarious trauma, offers insights into the potenial for triggering mental health issues among researchers and viewers of the participant-produced photographs. Through a discussion of these ethical issues, we offer suggestions to guide the work of health researchers who use, or are considering the use of, photovoice.


American Journal of Men's Health | 2017

Injury, Interiority, and Isolation in Men’s Suicidality

John L. Oliffe; Genevieve Creighton; Steve Robertson; Emily K. Jenkins; John S. Ogrodniczuk; Olivier Ferlatte

Men’s high suicide rates have been linked to individual risk factors including history of being abused as a child, single marital status, and financial difficulties. While it has also been suggested that the normative influences of hegemonic masculinities are implicated in men’s suicide, the gendered experiences of male suicidality are poorly understood. In the current photovoice study, 20 men who previously had suicidal thoughts, plans, and/or attempts were interviewed as a means to better understanding the connections between masculinities and their experiences of suicidality. The study findings revealed injury, interiority, and isolation as interconnected themes characterizing men’s suicidality. Injury comprised an array of childhood and/or cumulative traumas that fueled men’s ruminating thoughts inhibiting recovery and limiting hopes for improved life quality. In attempting to blunt these traumas, many men described self-injuring through the overuse of alcohol and other drugs. The interiority theme revealed how suicidal thoughts can fuel hopelessness amid summonsing remedies from within. The challenges to self-manage, especially when experiencing muddled thinking and negative thought were evident, and led some participants to summons exterior resources to counter suicidality. Isolation included separateness from others, and was linked to abandonment issues and not having a job and/or partner. Self-isolating also featured as a protection strategy to avoid troubling others and/or reducing exposure to additional noxious stimuli. The study findings suggest multiple intervention points and strategies, the majority of which are premised on promoting men’s social connectedness. The destigmatizing value of photovoice methods is also discussed.


Aids Care-psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of Aids\/hiv | 2017

Stigma and suicide among gay and bisexual men living with HIV

Olivier Ferlatte; Travis Salway; John L. Oliffe; Terry Trussler

ABSTRACT HIV positive gay and bisexual men (GBM) continue to struggle with the pervasiveness of HIV stigma, but little is known about the health effects of stigma. In this article, suicidal ideation and attempts are measured among GBM living with HIV, evaluating the extent to which these experiences are associated with stigma and suicide. Drawing from an online national survey of Canadian GBM completed by 7995 respondents, a sub-set of data provided by respondents self-reporting HIV-positive status was used for the current study. The associations between suicidal ideation (SI) and attempts (SA) and four measures of HIV stigma were measured: social exclusion, sexual rejection, verbal abuse and physical abuse. A total of 673 HIV-positive men completed the survey (8% of total sample). Among this group, 22% (n = 150) reported SI and 5% (n = 33) SA in the last 12 months. After adjusting for sociodemographic factors, SI and SA were associated with each of the four measures of HIV stigma: being excluded socially for being HIV positive (SI adjusted odds ratio, AOR 2.0 95% CI 1.4–3.1; SA AOR 3.8 95% CI 1.9–7.9), rejected as a sexual partner (SI AOR 1.6 95% CI 1.1–2.4; SA AOR 2.6 95% CI 1.1–6.0), verbally abused (SI AOR 2.9 95% CI 1.9–4.5; SA AOR 2.4 95% CI 1.1–5.1), and physically abused (SI AOR 4.5 95% CI 1.8–11.7; SA AOR 6.4 95% CI 2.0–20.1). Furthermore, experiencing multiple forms of stigma was associated with significantly increased risk of SI and SA. The authors conclude that HIV positive GBM experience significant levels of stigma that are associated with heightened risk for suicide. The findings affirm the need for targeted interventions to prevent suicide amid public health efforts to de-stigmatize HIV and mental illness.


Journal of Homosexuality | 2018

Recent Suicide Attempts Across Multiple Social Identities Among Gay and Bisexual Men: An Intersectionality Analysis

Olivier Ferlatte; Travis Salway Hottes; Olena Hankivsky; Terry Trussler; John L. Oliffe; Rick Marchand

ABSTRACT This study draws from intersectionality to describe variations in recent suicide attempts (RSA) among gay and bisexual men (GBM) across sociodemographics. Using survey data, logistic regression modeling explored RSA in two analytical stages: (1) the individual effects of each sociodemographic were measured; (2) two-way interaction terms between sociodemographics were tested and added to the models created in stage A. In stage A, only education and income achieved significance. In stage B, the study found that (a) education and income interacted significantly such that the odds of RSA increased for those with a lower income and a lower education; (b) sexual orientation and partnership status interacted, resulting in decreased odds among bisexual men in heterosexual partnerships; and (c) income and education interacted with geography; the effects of these variables were significant only among urban men. These findings suggest that GBM are at unequal risk of RSA according to intersecting sociodemographics.


Critical Public Health | 2018

Combining intersectionality and syndemic theory to advance understandings of health inequities among Canadian gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men

Olivier Ferlatte; Travis Salway; Terry Trussler; John L. Oliffe; Mark Gilbert

Abstract Syndemics (socially produced intertwined epidemics) of psychosocial issues have been shown empirically to increase the risk of HIV infection among gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men (GBM). However, to intervene effectively identifying those who are most vulnerable is critically important. Using an intersectionality framework, this study analyzed data drawn from 8490 Canadian GBM respondents to an online survey to evaluate demographic factors associated with experiencing a syndemic. A multivariable regression model was used to identify demographic characteristics among those experiencing a syndemic of two or more issues. Then, applying an intersectionality framework, the sample was stratified by gay and bisexual men, and by men partnered with woman (whether they were gay, bisexual or other), and the multivariate analyses for demographic variables were repeated for each strata. Multivariate regression models found that men were more at risk of syndemics if they identified as gay, were single, young (< 30-years-old), did not have a university degree and were low-income earners (<


American Journal of Men's Health | 2017

Depression and Suicidality in Gay Men: Implications for Health Care Providers:

Carrie Lee; John L. Oliffe; Mary T. Kelly; Olivier Ferlatte

60,000 per year). On stratified analysis, variations were found between gay, bisexual and female-partnered men where gay men were at greater odds of reporting a syndemic. These results provide further evidence that syndemics of psychosocial issues increase the risk of HIV infection among GBM. More so, the occurrence of syndemics was dependent on every single variable investigated including ethnicity and income. As such, interventions to reduce the effects of syndemics should be targeted to those most at risk and address social and structural inequities.


Qualitative Health Research | 2018

Unpacking Social Isolation in Men’s Suicidality:

John L. Oliffe; Michaela Popa; Emily K. Jenkins; Simon Rice; Olivier Ferlatte; Emma Rossnagel

Gay men are a subgroup vulnerable to depression and suicidality. The prevalence of depression among gay men is three times higher than the general adult population. Because depression is a known risk factor for suicide, gay men are also at high risk for suicidality. Despite the high prevalence of depression and suicidality, health researchers and health care providers have tended to focus on sexual health issues, most often human immunodeficiency virus in gay men. Related to this, gay men’s health has often been defined by sexual practices, and poorly understood are the intersections of gay men’s physical and mental health with social determinants of health including ethnicity, locale, education level, and socioeconomic status. In the current article summated is literature addressing risk factors for depression and suicidality among gay men including family acceptance of their sexual identities, social cohesion and belonging, internalized stigma, and victimization. Barriers to gay men’s help seeking are also discussed in detailing how health care providers might advance the well-being of this underserved subgroup by effectively addressing depression and suicidality.


Qualitative Health Research | 2018

Men on Losing a Male to Suicide: A Gender Analysis:

John L. Oliffe; Mary T. Kelly; Joan L. Bottorff; Genevieve Creighton; Olivier Ferlatte

Social isolation has featured as a significant and oftentimes all-encompassing risk factor for male suicide, yet, as an explanatory mechanism, it has not been unpacked in terms of what it constitutes in everyday life. The current photovoice study explores the various dimensions of the lived experience of social isolation, as embedded in accounts of suicidality drawn from 35 Canadian men. Study participants narrated the following factors as underpinning their social isolation: (a) family dysfunction and estrangement, (b) marginality and feeling like misfits at school and work, (c) alienation and provisional acceptance of health care, (d) ineffectual and self-harming management, (e) intrusive dislocating thoughts, and (f) society’s burdensome and immoral subjects. These interwoven but discrete spheres provide a means for understanding the phenomenology of social isolation and a basis for melding ideas about connectedness, relationality, personal history, and care, along with strategies to support and reduce men’s suicidality.


Canadian Journal of Public Health-revue Canadienne De Sante Publique | 2018

Awareness of, interest in, and willingness to pay for HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis among Canadian gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men

Jeffrey Morgan; Olivier Ferlatte; Travis Salway; James Wilton; Mark W. Hull

Although male suicide has received research attention, the gendered experiences of men bereaved by male suicide are poorly understood. Addressing this knowledge gap, we share findings drawn from a photovoice study of Canadian-based men who had lost a male friend, partner, or family member to suicide. Two categories depicting the men’s overall account of the suicide were inductively derived: (a) unforeseen suicide and (b) rationalized suicide. The “unforeseen suicides” referred to deaths that occurred without warning wherein participants spoke to tensions between having no idea that the deceased was at risk while reflecting on what they might have done to prevent the suicide. In contrast, “rationalized suicides” detailed an array of preexisting risk factors including mental illness and/or substance overuse to discuss cause–effect scenarios. Commonalities in unforeseen and rationalized suicides are discussed in the overarching theme, “managing emotions” whereby participants distanced themselves, but also drew meaning from the suicide.


Archives of Sexual Behavior | 2018

Evidence of Multiple Mediating Pathways in Associations Between Constructs of Stigma and Self-Reported Suicide Attempts in a Cross-Sectional Study of Gay and Bisexual Men

Travis Salway; Dionne Gesink; Selahadin Ibrahim; Olivier Ferlatte; Anne E. Rhodes; David J. Brennan; Rick Marchand; Terry Trussler

ObjectivesPre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is a highly effective, HIV prevention strategy increasingly being accessed by gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (GBMSM). GBMSM face structural and individual-level barriers accessing PrEP, including awareness and cost. This paper assesses socio-demographic factors associated with awareness, interest, and willingness to pay for PrEP in a sample of Canadian GBMSM.MethodsData were derived from the 2015 Sex Now survey, a cross-sectional, online survey of GBMSM. Respondents were recruited through social media, sex-seeking “apps,” and by word of mouth. We used univariable and multivariable logistic regression models to estimate associations between socio-demographic factors and three primary outcomes.ResultsOur sample consisted of 7176 HIV-negative Canadian GBMSM. Of respondents, 54.7% were aware of PrEP, 47.4% were interested in PrEP, and 27.9% of PrEP-interested respondents reported they would pay for PrEP out-of-pocket. Awareness and interest varied between provinces, while GBMSM outside urban areas were less likely to be PrEP aware. Bisexual-identified men, and men over 50, were less likely to be aware and interested in PrEP in multivariable models. Only annual income and educational attainment were associated with willingness to pay for PrEP.ConclusionThis study identifies important disparities in awareness, interest, and willingness to pay for PrEP. Future interventions and educational efforts should target non-gay-identified and older GBMSM, as well as GBMSM outside urban areas. PrEP implementation may risk further perpetuating existing health inequities based on socio-economic status if PrEP continues to be accessed primarily through private insurance or paid for out-of-pocket.RésuméObjectifLa prophylaxie préexposition (PrEP) est. une stratégie de prévention du VIH très efficace, de plus en plus utilisée par les hommes gais et bisexuels et les hommes ayant des relations sexuelles avec d’autres hommes (GBHARSAH). Par contre, les GBHARSAH sont confrontés à des obstacles structurels et individuels face à l’accès à la PrEP, y compris la connaissance de la PrEP et les coûts. Cet article évalue les facteurs sociodémographiques associés à la connaissance, l’intérêt et la volonté de payer pour la PrEP dans un échantillon de GBHARSAH canadiens.MéthodeLes données proviennent de l’enquête Sexe au présent 2015, un sondage en ligne de GBHARSAH. Les répondants ont été recrutés par le biais des médias sociaux, des applications de rencontre et du bouche-à-oreille. Nous avons utilisé des modèles de régression logistique univariée et multivariée pour mesurer les associations entre les facteurs sociodémographiques et les trois principales variables de résultats.RésultatsNotre échantillon comprenait 7176 GBHARSAH canadiens séronégatifs. En tout, 54,7% des répondants étaient au courant de la PrEP, 47,4% des répondants étaient intéressés par la PrEP, et 27,9% des répondants intéressés par la PrEP ont indiqué qu’ils seraient prêts à payer pour la PrEP. La connaissance et l’intérêt envers la PrEP variaient d’une province à l’autre, tandis que les GBHARSAH en dehors des zones urbaines étaient moins susceptibles de connaitre la PrEP. Les hommes bisexuels et les hommes de plus de 50 ans étaient moins susceptibles de connaître et d’être intéressés par la PrEP dans les modèles multivariés. Seul le revenu annuel et le niveau de scolarité étaient associés à la volonté de payer pour la PrEP.ConclusionCette étude a identifié des disparités importantes dans la connaissance, l’intérêt et la volonté de payer pour la PrEP. Les interventions et les efforts d’éducation devraient cibler les GBHARSAH qui ne s’identifient pas comme gai, les GBHARSAH plus âgés, ainsi que les GBHARSAH en dehors des zones urbaines. De plus, la mise en œuvre de la PrEP risque de perpétuer davantage les inégalités existantes en matière de santé en fonction du statut socioéconomique si la PrEP continue d’être accessible principalement par le biais d’une assurance privée ou si les GBHARSAH doivent payer pour celle-ci.

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John L. Oliffe

University of British Columbia

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Travis Salway

University of British Columbia

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Emily K. Jenkins

University of British Columbia

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Genevieve Creighton

University of British Columbia

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Joan L. Bottorff

University of British Columbia

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John S. Ogrodniczuk

University of British Columbia

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Mary T. Kelly

University of British Columbia

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Simon Rice

University of Melbourne

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Carrie Lee

University of British Columbia

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