Supplementary materials for PhD thesis - "How Do Men Who Have Sex With Men Currently Understand, Evaluate And Respond To HIV Risk? A Mixed Methods Analysis Of An Internet Survey In A Post-Antiretroviral Society."
posted on 2025-11-17, 11:12authored byBrian Kavanagh
<p dir="ltr">This dataset comprises the files contained on a CD-ROM which was attached to the thesis when it was submitted in 2016. It was uploaded to ORDO in 2025 for preservation purposes. For more information, please refer to the thesis “<a href="https://doi.org/10.21954/ou.ro.0000bece" rel="noreferrer" target="_blank">How Do Men Who Have Sex With Men Currently Understand, Evaluate And Respond To HIV Risk? A Mixed Methods Analysis Of An Internet Survey In A Post-Antiretroviral Society.</a>” via ORO.</p><h2>Thesis abstract</h2><p dir="ltr">This thesis sets out to examine how men who have sex with men (MSM) currently understand, evaluate and respond to HIV risk. The aims of the study were to explore key areas of HIV risk understanding, including how HIV risk was understood in a post-antiretroviral society and how masculinities affect this risk understanding. In addition, key aspects of the negotiation of sex used by those who were single and in (open) relationships were considered. An examination of a variety of mass media HIV prevention interventions was carried out to explore what viewing them tells us about risk perception and response. Of key interest to this research was how these understandings of HIV risk were evolving within the context of the shifting definitions of love, with the introduction of formalised relationship structures, and sex, caused by the impact of antiretrovirals in the MSM communities. This study unified the results from quantitative and qualitative data that emerged from an online mixed methods survey to unravel the experiences of a convenience sample of 557 UK-based MSM. This survey incorporated a mixture of both open and closed questions, vignette questions and made the use of visuals to allow nuanced responses to emerge. The findings reveal how these shifting definitions of sex and love are affecting how men understand HIV risk, the consequences for the negotiation of sex, and indicate various improvements that may need to be made to address these issues.</p>