Abstract
Until an effective vaccine or treatment for AIDS is developed, the rate of spread of the epidemic will be determined primarily by the willingness of infected and at-risk individuals to refrain from behaviors implicated in the spread of the disease. Consequently, public health efforts have focused on educating these populations about the dangers inherent in certain practices. To date, the impact of these educational activities has been most extensively studied with regard to gay and bisexual men. Researchers, however, seem not always to appreciate the necessity to examine change at two levels of analysis—the individual and the aggregate because it is possible to draw different but valid conclusions about the nature of change, depending upon the level of analysis used. A series of models for examining individual and aggregate level change are described. These models are then used to examine whether there is evidence of change over a 6-month period in the sexual behavior of a sample of gay men from New York City. The data reveal evidence of a significant trend in the direction of safer sexual behavior at both the individual and aggregate level.
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Bishop, Y. M., Feinberg, S. E., and Holland, P. W. (1975).Discrete Multivariate Analysis: Theory and Practice MIT Press, Cambridge, MA.
Communication Technologies. (1987).Designing an Effective AIDS Prevention Campaign Strategy for San Francisco. Results from the First Probability Sample of an Urban Gay Male Community San Francisco AIDS Foundation, San Francisco.
Darrow, W. W., Barrett, D., Jay, K., and Young, A. (1981). The gay report on sexually transmitted diseases.Am. J. Public Health 71: 1004–1011.
Feldman, D. A. (1986). AIDS health promotion and clinically applied anthropology. In Feldman, D. A., and Johnson, T. K. (eds.),The Social Dimensions of AIDS: Method and Theory Praeger, New York.
Golubjatnikov, R., Pfister, J., and Tillotson, T. (1983). Homosexual promiscuity and the fear of AIDS.Lancet 2: 681.
Goodman, L. A. (1978).Analyzing Qualitative/Categorical Data ABT Books, Cambridge, MA.
Jones, C. C., Waskin, H., Gerety, B. Skipper, B. J., Hall, H. F., and Mertz, G. J. (1987). Persistence in high risk sexual activity among homosexual men in an area of low incidence of Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome.Sex. Transmit. Dis. 14: 79–82.
Joseph, J. G., Mongtomery, S., Kessler, R. C., Ostrow, D. G., Emmons, C. A., and Phair, J. P. (1979). Two year longitudinal study of behavioral risk reduction in a cohort of homosexual men. Paper presented at the Third International Conference on AIDS, Washington, DC.
McKusick, L., Horstman, W., and Coates, T. J. (1985a). AIDS and sexual behavior reported by gay men in San Francosco.Am. J. Public Health. 75: 493–496.
McKusick, L., Wiley, J. A., Coates, T. J., Stall, R., Saika, G., Morin, S., Charles, K., Horstman, W., and Conant, M. A. (1985b). Reported changes in sexual behavior of men at risk for AIDS, San Francisco, 1982–1984—the AIDS behavioral research project.Public Health Rep. 100: 622–629.
Martin, J. L. (1987). The impact of AIDS on gay male sexual behavior patterns in New York City.Am. J. Public Helath 77: 578–584.
Ostrow, D. G., Emmons, C. A., and O'Brien, K. (1986). Magnitude and predictors of behavioral risk reductions in a cohort of homosexual men. Paper presented at the International Conference on AIDS, Paris, June.
Research and Decisions Corporation. (1984).Designing an Effective AIDS Prevention Campaign Strategy for San Francisco: Results From the First Probability Sample of an Urban Gay Male Community San Francisco AIDS Foundation, San Francisco.
Research and Decisions Corporation. (1985).Designing an Effective AIDS Prevention Campaign Strategy for San Francisco: Results From the Second Probability Sample of an Urban Gay Male Community San Francisco AIDS Foundation, San Francisco.
Research and Decisions Corporation. (1986).Designing an Effective AIDS Prevention Campaign Strategy for San Francisco: Results from the Third Probability Sample of an Urban Gay male Community San Francisco AIDS Foundation, San Francisco.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Additional information
This work was supported in part by grants from the National Institute of Mental Health (MH39551) and the New York State AIDS Institute (C00577).
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Siegel, K., Glassman, M. Individual and aggregate level change in sexual behavior among gay men at risk for AIDS. Arch Sex Behav 18, 335–348 (1989). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01541952
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01541952