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Dive into the research topics where Travis Wendel is active.

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Featured researches published by Travis Wendel.


American Journal of Public Health | 2011

Unprotected Anal Intercourse and Sexually Transmitted Diseases in High-Risk Heterosexual Women

Samuel M. Jenness; Elizabeth M. Begier; Alan Neaigus; Christopher S. Murrill; Travis Wendel; Holly Hagan

OBJECTIVES We examined the association between unprotected anal intercourse and sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) among heterosexual women. METHODS In 2006 through 2007, women were recruited from high-risk areas in New York City through respondent-driven sampling as part of the National HIV Behavioral Surveillance study. We used multiple logistic regression to determine the relationship between unprotected anal intercourse and HIV infection and past-year STD diagnosis. RESULTS Of the 436 women studied, 38% had unprotected anal intercourse in the past year. Unprotected anal intercourse was more likely among those who were aged 30 to 39 years, were homeless, were frequent drug or binge alcohol users, had an incarcerated sexual partner, had sexual partners with whom they exchanged sex for money or drugs, or had more than 5 sexual partners in the past year. In the logistic regression, women who had unprotected anal intercourse were 2.6 times as likely as women who had only unprotected vaginal intercourse and 4.2 times as likely as women who had neither unprotected anal nor unprotected vaginal intercourse to report an STD diagnosis. We found no significant association between unprotected anal intercourse and HIV infection. CONCLUSIONS Increased screening for history of unprotected anal intercourse and, for those who report recent unprotected anal intercourse, counseling and testing for HIV and STDs would likely reduce STD infections.


Aids and Behavior | 2010

Reconsidering the Internet as an HIV/STD Risk for Men Who Have Sex with Men

Samuel M. Jenness; Alan Neaigus; Holly Hagan; Travis Wendel; Camila Gelpi-Acosta; Christopher S. Murrill

Previous studies linking online sexual partnerships to behavioral risks among men who have sex with men (MSM) may be subject to confounding and imprecise measurement of partnership-specific risks. We examined behavioral risks associated with having only online, only offline, or both online and offline partners in the past year, the confounding effects of multiple partnerships, and partnership-specific risks among a sample of MSM from New York City recruited offline in 2008. Overall, 28% of 479 participants had an online partner in the past year, but most of those (82%) also had an offline partner. Having an online partner was associated with past-year unprotected anal intercourse (UAI) and other risks, but not after controlling for multiple partnerships. There were slightly higher levels of risk within offline partnerships, but differences were largely attributable to MSM who had both offline and online partners. Last sex partners met offline were more likely to be HIV-serodiscordant and engage in concurrent substance use with the participant. This suggests that online partnerships may not be an independent cause of behavioral risks, but a marker for risks occurring independent of Internet use.


Aids Patient Care and Stds | 2010

Heterosexual HIV and sexual partnerships between injection drug users and noninjection drug users.

Samuel M. Jenness; Alan Neaigus; Holly Hagan; Christopher S. Murrill; Travis Wendel

Sex partnerships with injection drug users (IDU) are an understudied network-level risk factor for heterosexual HIV infection. Heterosexuals with no history of injection were recruited from high-risk areas in New York City through respondent-driven sampling. We examined the prevalence of IDU sex partnerships among these non-IDU, the factors associated with having a past year IDU partner, and the independent association of HIV infection and IDU sex partnerships in multiple logistic regression. Of the 601 non-IDU in this analysis, 13.8% had a sex partner in the past year with a history of injection. IDU partnerships were significantly more common among women and those with higher levels of unprotected sex and drug and alcohol use. Overall, 7.0% tested positive for HIV. HIV prevalence was higher (p = 0.07) for participants with IDU partners (9.6%) compared to those with no IDU partners (4.6%). In multiple logistic regression, participants with IDU partners were over twice as likely to be HIV-infected (p = 0.08). Sex partnerships with IDU were common and may play an important role in heterosexual HIV transmission in areas with large IDU populations. Prevention interventions to encourage the disclosure of injection history and risk reduction specifically for those with IDU partners are indicated.


Journal of Urban Health-bulletin of The New York Academy of Medicine | 2011

Patterns of Exchange Sex and HIV Infection in High-Risk Heterosexual Men and Women

Samuel M. Jenness; Paul Kobrak; Travis Wendel; Alan Neaigus; Christopher S. Murrill; Holly Hagan

Heterosexual partnerships involving the trade of money or goods for sex are a well-described HIV risk factor in Africa and Southeast Asia, but less research has been conducted on exchange partnerships and their impact on HIV infection in the United States. In our study, men and women were recruited from high-risk risk neighborhoods in New York City through respondent-driven sampling in 2006–2007. We examined the factors associated with having an exchange partner in the past year, the relationship between exchange partnerships and HIV infection, and the risk characteristics of those with exchange partners by the directionality of payment. Overall, 28% of men and 41% of women had a past-year exchange partner. For men, factors independently associated with exchange partnerships were older age, more total sexual partners, male partners, and frequent non-injection drug use. For women, factors were homelessness, more total sexual partners, more unprotected sex partners, and frequent non-injection drug use. Exchange partnerships were associated with HIV infection for both men and women, although the relationships were substantially confounded by other behavioral risks. Those who both bought and sold sex exhibited the highest levels of risk with their exchange and non-exchange partners. Exchange partnerships may be an HIV risk both directly and indirectly, given the overlap of this phenomenon with other risk factors that occur with both exchange and non-exchange partners.


Public Health Reports | 2011

Recruitment-Adjusted Estimates of HIV Prevalence and Risk Among Men Who Have Sex with Men: Effects of Weighting Venue-Based Sampling Data

Samuel M. Jenness; Alan Neaigus; Christopher S. Murrill; Camila Gelpi-Acosta; Travis Wendel; Holly Hagan

Objectives. We investigated the impact of recruitment bias within the venue-based sampling (VBS) method, which is widely used to estimate disease prevalence and risk factors among groups, such as men who have sex with men (MSM), that congregate at social venues. Methods. In a 2008 VBS study of 479 MSM in New York City, we calculated venue-specific approach rates (MSM approached/MSM counted) and response rates (MSM interviewed/MSM approached), and then compared crude estimates of HIV risk factors and seroprevalence with estimates weighted to address the lower selection probabilities of MSM who attend social venues infrequently or were recruited at high-volume venues. Results. Our approach rates were lowest at dance clubs, gay pride events, and public sex strolls, where venue volumes were highest; response rates ranged from 39% at gay pride events to 95% at community-based organizations. Sixty-seven percent of respondents attended MSM-oriented social venues at least weekly, and 21% attended such events once a month or less often in the past year. In estimates adjusted for these variations, the prevalence of several past-year risk factors (e.g., unprotected anal intercourse with casual/exchange partners, ≥5 total partners, group sex encounters, at least weekly binge drinking, and hard-drug use) was significantly lower compared with crude estimates. Adjusted HIV prevalence was lower than unadjusted prevalence (15% vs. 18%), but not significantly. Conclusions. Not adjusting VBS data for recruitment biases could overestimate HIV risk and prevalence when the selection probability is greater for higher-risk MSM. While further examination of recruitment-adjustment methods for VBS data is needed, presentation of both unadjusted and adjusted estimates is currently indicated.


Journal of Drug Issues | 2007

“You're Always Training the Dog”:1 Strategic Interventions to Reconfigure Drug Markets

Ric Curtis; Travis Wendel

Based on ethnographic observation of the changes in drug markets and violence in New York City over the past 20 years, this paper compares and contrasts three distinct types of drug markets and the types of systemic violence that are characteristic of each and argues that knowing which kinds of markets and contexts are associated with what kinds of violence can be valuable for policy makers and professionals. Further, evolving drug markets and different forms of violence associated with particular market types are, in part, responses to law enforcement interventions intended to eliminate drug markets. Police interventions alter the character of drug markets—either for better or for worse—as they adapt, and these interventions can produce markedly different outcomes with regard to violence and crime. Comparatively brief interventions of limited scope can effectively control violence and reconfigure markets by “training” them to act in ways less likely to produce violence and social disorder.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2011

Estimated HIV incidence among high-risk heterosexuals in New York City, 2007.

Samuel M. Jenness; Alan Neaigus; Christopher S. Murrill; Travis Wendel; Lisa A. Forgione; Holly Hagan

Estimates of HIV incidence rates among high-risk heterosexuals (HRH) in the United States have been limited to heterosexual subgroups like prison inmates and commercial sex workers. In this analysis, we estimate incidence with detuned assay testing among a group of HRH defined through a multidimensional sampling strategy and recruited through respondent-driven sampling. Incidence was 3.31% per year (95% confidence interval = 1.43 to 6.47) overall and 2.59% per year (95% confidence interval = 0.84 to 6.06) among participants with no lifetime history of drug injection or male-to-male sex. This study design is suggested as an efficient method for recruiting HRH for cohort studies and behavioral interventions.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Early Linkage to HIV Care and Antiretroviral Treatment among Men Who Have Sex with Men — 20 Cities, United States, 2008 and 2011

Brooke Hoots; Teresa Finlayson; Cyprian Wejnert; Gabriela Paz-Bailey; Jennifer Taussig; Robert Gern; Tamika Hoyte; Laura Teresa Hernandez Salazar; Jianglan White; Jeff Todd; Greg Bautista; Colin Flynn; Frangiscos Sifakis; Danielle German; Debbie Isenberg; Maura Driscoll; Elizabeth Hurwitz; Miminos; Rose Doherty; Chris Wittke; Nikhil Prachand; Nanette Benbow; Sharon Melville; Praveen Pannala; Richard Yeager; Aaron Sayegh; Jim Dyer; Shane Sheu; Alicia Novoa; Mark Thrun

Early linkage to care and antiretroviral (ARV) treatment are associated with reduced HIV transmission. Male-to-male sexual contact represents the largest HIV transmission category in the United States; men who have sex with men (MSM) are an important focus of care and treatment efforts. With the release of the National HIV/AIDS Strategy and expanded HIV treatment guidelines, increases in early linkage to care and ARV treatment are expected. We examined differences in prevalence of early linkage to care and ARV treatment among HIV-positive MSM between 2008 and 2011. Data are from the National HIV Behavioral Surveillance System, which monitors behaviors among populations at high risk of HIV infection in 20 U.S. cities with high AIDS burden. MSM were recruited through venue-based, time-space sampling. Prevalence ratios comparing 2011 to 2008 were estimated using linear mixed models. Early linkage was defined as an HIV clinic visit within 3 months of diagnosis. ARV treatment was defined as use at interview. Prevalence of early linkage to care was 79% (187/236) in 2008 and 83% (241/291) in 2011. In multivariable analysis, prevalence of early linkage did not differ significantly between years overall (P = 0.44). Prevalence of ARV treatment was 69% (790/1,142) in 2008 and 79% (1,049/1,336) in 2001. In multivariable analysis, ARV treatment increased overall (P = 0.0003) and among most sub-groups. Black MSM were less likely than white MSM to report ARV treatment (P = 0.01). While early linkage to care did not increase significantly between 2008 and 2011, ARV treatment increased among most sub-groups. Progress is being made in getting MSM on HIV treatment, but more efforts are needed to decrease disparities in ARV coverage.


Sexually Transmitted Diseases | 2014

Multilevel risk factors for greater HIV infection of black men who have sex with men in New York City

Alan Neaigus; Kathleen H. Reilly; Samuel M. Jenness; Travis Wendel; David M. Marshall; Holly Hagan

Background There is a large and disproportionate burden of HIV in black men who have sex with men (MSM) which is not adequately explained by racial/ethnic differences in risk behaviors. However, social factors may account for this disparity in HIV infection. We examine the extent to which both individual risk behaviors and social factors reduce the effect of black race and may account for the disparity in HIV infection of black MSM. Methods In a cross-sectional study in New York City in 2011, MSM were venue sampled, interviewed, and HIV tested. Variables associated (P < 0.10) both with black race and testing HIV positive were analyzed using multivariate logistic regression. Results Of 416 participants who were HIV tested and did not self-report being positive, 19.5% were black, 41.1% were Hispanic, 30.5% were white, and 8.9% were of other race/ethnicity. Overall, 8.7% tested positive (24.7% of blacks, 7.6% of Hispanics, 1.0% of whites, and 5.4% of other). The effect of black race versus non–black race/ethnicity with testing HIV positive declined by 49.2%, (crude odds ratio, 6.5 [95% confidence interval, 3.2–13.3] vs. adjusted odds ratio, 3.3 [95% confidence interval, 1.5–7.5]), after adjustment for having a black last sex partner, not having tested for HIV in the past 12 months, Brooklyn residency, and having an annual income less than US


Substance Use & Misuse | 2013

A reexamination of connectivity trends via exponential random graph modeling in two IDU risk networks.

Kirk Dombrowski; Bilal Khan; Katherine McLean; Ric Curtis; Travis Wendel; Evan Misshula; Samuel R. Friedman

20,000. Conclusions Greater HIV infection risk of black MSM may result from social factors and less frequent HIV testing than from differences in risk behaviors. To reduce the disparity in HIV infection of black MSM, multilevel interventions that both ameliorate social risk factors and increase the frequency of HIV testing are needed.

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Alan Neaigus

New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene

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Holly Hagan

Public Health – Seattle

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Kathleen H. Reilly

New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene

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Ric Curtis

John Jay College of Criminal Justice

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Camila Gelpi-Acosta

National Development and Research Institutes

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Christopher S. Murrill

New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene

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David M. Marshall

John Jay College of Criminal Justice

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Bilal Khan

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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