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Milwaukee Partnership to Respond to 2009 EPI AID Study in Milwaukee. Brenda Coley Diverse and Resilient, Inc. Current HIV Data. MSM: MSM continue to be severely affected by HIV. In 2009, 63% of reported HIV cases in Milwaukee were among MSM (4% were also IDU).
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Milwaukee Partnership to Respond to 2009 EPI AID Study in Milwaukee Brenda ColeyDiverse and Resilient, Inc.
Current HIV Data MSM: MSM continue to be severely affected by HIV. In 2009, 63% of reported HIV cases in Milwaukee were among MSM (4% were also IDU). African American MSM: In Milwaukee, among MSM reported with HIV infection in 2009, 49% were African American, 35% were White and 13% were Hispanic. Young African American MSM: Adjusted reported cases of HIV in Black MSM age 13-29 years tripled between the years 2000 and 2008 in Wisconsin.
Response Committees • Thirty-one providers participated in two meetings and generally endorsed a behavioral-environmental model and debated testing vs other interventions • Twenty-eight African American MSM participated in two meetings and expanded a behavioral-environmental model to include MSM psycho-social factors
Other Committees Advisory • 18 Members • One Meeting • Reviewed and analyzed all other committee results Steering • 9 Members • Two meetings • Determined committee membership • Reviewed and analyzed committee results and recommendations Working • 4 Members • Six meetings • Structured committee content • Prepared and reviewed notes • Prepared agenda for other meetings
Expanded Audiences for this information • Young African American MSM, African American MSM, MSM • Family and Friends • Schools, educators, youth-serving agencies • Juvenile Justice and Foster Care • Faith Communities
Misalignment of Resources • Many successful HIV prevention programs have been funded among general African American or Latino populations and/or for women at risk of substance abuse or incarceration. • There has been less organizational readiness among groups conducting prevention services for MSM and less prevention funding was directed toward this population. • In the past 10 years, City of Milwaukee funding support to HIV programs through contracts has decreased by 81%. • The Wisconsin AIDS/HIV Program estimates that 20 to 40% of Black MSM ages 15-59 in Milwaukee County may be HIV positive, compared with 8 – 16% for white and Latino MSM. • In contrast, the HIV prevalence among Black females and non-MSM males is 0.7%. • Although 55% of reported HIV cases are among MSM, 10% of health education and risk reduction funding was spent on this population in 2009.
Social Determinants Young Black HIV-positive MSM had: • A higher proportion of same-race partners • A greater frequency of feelings indicative of internalized homophobia, • A greater frequency of negative reactions by family members, and were less likely to report feeling that they could be open about their sexuality; • A greater frequency of economic and housing instability; • A greater frequency of having been pressured to have sex against their will.
Psychological and Personal Factors Some MSM • have difficulties maintaining consistently safe behaviors over time, • underestimate personal risk, and • have inaccurate perceptions that because of treatment advances, HIV is no longer a serious health threat. Personal resiliency factors appear to contribute to other men in similar situations remaining HIV negative. These factors may include: • comfort with self, • mental health, • avoidance of alcohol and drug use, • and skills associated with self-efficacy.
ENDHIV Program Recommendations • Develop or adapt and implement group interventions specifically tailored to young African American MSM • Improve program outreach to MSM in general and African American MSM in particular • Re-examine events hosted by organizations to assure the inclusion of men, MSM, young MSM and MSM of color. • Identify and support two or three Black churches to exercise leadership in justice for gay and bisexual men.
ENDHIV Content Recommendations • Communicate that the virus is more prevalent in MSM and African American MSM populations and therefore it is transmitted more readily. • Address low self-esteem, depression and isolation as factors in irregular adherence to HIV prevention methods • Create positive approaches to communicating with and about MSM. • Address low self-esteem, depression and isolation as factors in irregular adherence to HIV prevention methods • Create healthy approaches to relationship development. • Create approaches for families and friends to learn how to be allies and for allies to disclose their favorable disposition to LGBT people.
ENDHIV Structural Recommendations • Significantly increase resources in Milwaukee to address HIV prevention needs of MSM, particularly young African American MSM • Develop safe venues for MSM to be themselves. • Create positive approaches to communicating with and about MSM. • Address economic disparities, education, lack of life skills, lack of access to health care. • Reduce the barriers and stigma associated with seeking medical care for HIV. • Confront homophobia, racism, and the social exclusion of gay and bisexual men – both from the African American community and the LGBT community.
The Challenges • Limited existing infrastructure to do major coordinated projects. Current programs are barely networked. • Community readiness for change • Strength of community norms • Familiarity with evidence-based practice • Cultural blindness of likely partners • Historic funding systems
ENDHIV Gary Hollander Brenda Coley Mark O’Neil 414-390-0444