Seeing Is Believing? Unique Capabilities of Internet-Only Studies as a Tool for Implementation Research on HIV Prevention for Men Who Have Sex With Men: A Review of Studies and Methodological Considerations.

Christian Grov, Drew Westmoreland, H Jonathon Rendina, Denis Nash
Author Information
  1. Christian Grov: Department of Community Health Sciences, CUNY Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy, New York, NY.
  2. Drew Westmoreland: CUNY Institute for Implementation Science in Population Health, New York, NY.
  3. H Jonathon Rendina: Department of Psychology, Hunter College of CUNY, PRIDE Health Research Consortium, New York, NY.
  4. Denis Nash: CUNY Institute for Implementation Science in Population Health, New York, NY.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In 2014, Grov et al published a comprehensive review cataloguing both men who have sex with men's (MSM's) sexual behavior transitions in online environments from the 1990s through 2013, as well as researchers' efforts in tandem to use the internet to engage MSM into research, treatment, and prevention.
METHODS: In this article, we discuss historical events and research having occurred in the half decade since the Grov et al publication.
RESULTS: Notable transitions include MSM's expanded use of geosocial networking apps, as well as other forms of social media accessed primarily through mobile devices, as well as the addition of biomedical prevention strategies (eg, pre-exposure prophylaxis and undetectable = untransmittable) to the proverbial HIV prevention toolkit. In tandem, researchers have rapidly expanded their employment of internet-mediated methods for the recruitment and engagement of key populations for HIV research, treatment, and prevention. In this article, we discuss methodological considerations for using the internet to conduct HIV prevention research with MSM: (1) sources of recruitment (eg, geosocial apps, Facebook, crowdsourced online panels); (2) design (eg, cross sectional, longitudinal, diaries); (3) incentives (including disincentivizing fraudulent participants and/or spam bots); (4) confidentiality; and (5) representativeness.
CONCLUSION: We conclude by discussing future directions in HIV prevention research in light of forthcoming technologies such as fifth generation (5G) mobile networks, combined use of self-collected biological data alongside self-report, and the utility of metadata and metaresearch to document, evaluate, and inform best practices.

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Grants

  1. UG3 AI133674/NIAID NIH HHS
  2. UG3 AI133675/NIAID NIH HHS
  3. UH3 AI133674/NIAID NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Adult
Cross-Sectional Studies
HIV Infections
Health Services Research
Homosexuality, Male
Humans
Implementation Science
Internet
Male
Patient Selection

Word Cloud

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