Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Homosexual Men In Small Cities Less Likely To Be Tested For HIV

Darpan News Desk IANS, 02 Jun, 2016 11:03 AM
  • Homosexual Men In Small Cities Less Likely To Be Tested For HIV
Men who live in small cities and have sex with other men are less likely to get an HIV test than their metropolitan counterparts, says a study.
 
The lower testing rates are likely connected to internalised feelings of homophobia and a reluctance to disclose sexual preferences at a doctor's office, the researchers said.
 
"This study shows that a lack of feeling accepted appears to not only pose mental health risks, it poses physical health risks," said Susan Holtzman, Associate Professor of Psychology at University of British Columbia in Canada.
 
"The fact that these men are reluctant to tell their doctor about their sexuality is something that requires attention in our healthcare system if we hope to increase the number of people tested for HIV," Holtzman noted.
 
The study, conducted in cooperation with the Living Positive Resource Centre in Kelowna, British Columbia, surveyed 153 people recruited through online dating sites and events in the gay community.
 
The researchers found that 24 per cent of men living in smaller communities had never had an HIV test, compared to the 14 to 17 per cent of untested men living in large Canadian cities such as Vancouver and Toronto.
 
The findings were published in the journal AIDS Care.

MORE National ARTICLES

Federal Judge Assails Transport Canada Rationale For No-fly List Secrecy

Federal Judge Assails Transport Canada Rationale For No-fly List Secrecy
OTTAWA — The public could be a step closer to knowing a jealously guarded federal secret: the number of people on Canada's no-fly list.

Federal Judge Assails Transport Canada Rationale For No-fly List Secrecy

66 Gun, Drug Charges Laid, 2 People Charged After Abbotsford Bust

66 Gun, Drug Charges Laid, 2 People Charged After Abbotsford Bust
 28-year-old Abbotsford man faces 66 firearms and drug charges stemming from the investigation that ended last week.

66 Gun, Drug Charges Laid, 2 People Charged After Abbotsford Bust

Mentally Ill Adults Need More Services In And Out Of Hospital: B.C. Audit

Mentally Ill Adults Need More Services In And Out Of Hospital: B.C. Audit
Carol Bellringer says there's a lack of information about wait lists and whether programs meet the needs of the most vulnerable patients.

Mentally Ill Adults Need More Services In And Out Of Hospital: B.C. Audit

Siphon Creek Blaze Grows In Northeastern B.C., As Crews Hope For Weather Break

Siphon Creek Blaze Grows In Northeastern B.C., As Crews Hope For Weather Break
  Environment Canada was calling for strong gusts Monday and Wildfire information officer Kevin Skrepnek agrees conditions were challenging to start the week, but he also says crews are thankful for more moderate winds.

Siphon Creek Blaze Grows In Northeastern B.C., As Crews Hope For Weather Break

B.C. Daughter Donates Kidney To Mom, Starts Marathon Transplant Awareness Ride

B.C. Daughter Donates Kidney To Mom, Starts Marathon Transplant Awareness Ride
Twenty-eight-year-old Eileen Zheng says both she and her mother are living healthy lives after the transplant operation last year.

B.C. Daughter Donates Kidney To Mom, Starts Marathon Transplant Awareness Ride

Vancouver Teen Engineers Bacteria To Win Top Prize At Biggest School Contest

Vancouver Teen Engineers Bacteria To Win Top Prize At Biggest School Contest
Austin Wang, 18, won a US$75,000 award for engineering genetically modified E. coli bacteria that speeds up the process of converting organic waste into electricity.

Vancouver Teen Engineers Bacteria To Win Top Prize At Biggest School Contest