Relationship Between Sexual Behaviors with Non-committed Relationship Partners and COVID-19 Restrictions and Notification Rates: Results from a Longitudinal Study of Gay and Bisexual Men in Australia
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Published:2022-05-28
Issue:
Volume:
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ISSN:1868-9884
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Container-title:Sexuality Research and Social Policy
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Sex Res Soc Policy
Author:
Storer DanielORCID, Prestage Garrett, McManus Hamish, Maher Lisa, Bavinton Benjamin R., Ellard Jeanne, Jin Fengyi, Philpot Steven, Holt Martin, Saxton Peter, Haire Bridget, Murphy Dean, Hammoud Mohamed A.
Abstract
Abstract
Introduction
COVID-19 related lockdowns have impacted the sexual activity of gay and bisexual men (GBM). We investigated trends in sexual behaviors and the COVID-19 context in which they occurred (COVID-notification rates and jurisdictional restrictions) to understand changes in the duration and severity of periods of lockdown on the sexual behavior of Australian GBM.
Methods
In an online, prospective observational study of 831 GBM from May 2020 to May 2021, we investigated associations between changes in sexual behavior among Australian GBM, lockdowns, and COVID-19 notification rates through weekly surveys from May 2020 to May 2021.
Results
The mean age was 45.71 years (SD: 13.93). Most identified as gay (89.0%) and 10.2% were living with HIV. There was an overall increase in the mean weekly number of non-committed relationship partners (0.53–0.90, p < 0.001). The state of Victoria experienced a significant extended COVID-19 outbreak, accompanied by severe lockdown restrictions. In response, Victorian men’s partner numbers shifted three times, while elsewhere there was an overall gradually increasing trend.
Conclusions
Less severe outbreaks with shorter lockdown periods, involving fewer and geographically contained, COVID-19 notifications were accompanied by non-significant changes in sex with non-relationship partners than more severe outbreaks over extended periods and larger geographical areas.
Funder
NSW Ministry of Health University of New South Wales
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Health (social science),Gender Studies
Reference50 articles.
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