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Unsafe Sex Rates High in Miami Beach, S.F.

Young gay men aren't being careful, surveys find

By Randy Dotinga
HealthDay Reporter


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FRIDAY, June 20 (HealthDayNews) -- New research confirms that unsafe sex is on the increase among HIV-positive gay men in San Francisco, while another study reports a whopping 15 percent of young gay men in a South Florida neighborhood are infected with the AIDS virus.

The findings add to a growing body of research that suggests gay men have become less vigilant about protecting themselves during sex.

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"People aren't using condoms, they don't know their own HIV status, and they don't know their partner's status," says Jed Herman, associate program director with the Stop AIDS organization.

Stop AIDS assisted researchers in the San Francisco study, which took place from 1999 to 2001. Volunteers interviewed 10,579 gay and bisexual men at various locations throughout the city, including gay clubs and street fairs. They also talked to men during the annual gay pride parade events and on sidewalks in gay neighborhoods.

The researchers acknowledge it's not clear if the results represent a true cross-section of gay men in the city. But at the least, they say, the numbers represent a significant number of gay men.

The findings appear in the June 1 issue of the Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes.

In 2001, 16.7 percent of the men surveyed reported that they'd recently risked the transmission of HIV during unprotected anal sex with at least two men. In these cases, the partners weren't both known to be HIV-positive or both HIV-negative, meaning that one partner could have been at risk of getting infected.

The rate of unsafe sex was just 12.7 percent in 1999.

Overall, 20.8 percent of HIV-positive men surveyed said they'd had unprotected anal sex with partners whose HIV status was either negative or unknown.

Researchers report they don't have statistics about the prevalence of HIV in San Francisco from 1999-2001, so they can't determine if the rising rates of unsafe sex contributed to more infections. But Herman says they're certainly "a protagonist for the perpetuation of the epidemic."

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Copyright © 2003 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.
Last updated 6/20/2003

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SOURCES: Jed Herman, associate program director, Stop AIDS, San Francisco; William W. Darrow, Ph.D., professor, public health, Florida International University, Miami; June 1, 2003, Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes


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