Tuesday, July 13, 2010
Strategies and ethical considerations for the recruitment of young men who have sex with men: challenges of a vaccination trial in Mexico
BACKGROUND:The importance of recruiting and retaining study participants from minority groups is well recognized; however, there are no established rules for recruitment as its success depends on the setting and population.
PURPOSE: To describe and analyze recruitment strategies, ethical considerations, and recruitment outcomes from a study to evaluate the efficacy the Human Papilloma Virus vaccine in young men who have sex with men (MSM).
METHODS: The recruitment settings were university and community sites in the state of Morelos, Mexico. Eligibility requirement were men between 18 and 23 years old, who were free of anal-genital lesions as confirmed by clinical exploration, HIV negative, with no history of sexual relations with female partners and with fewer than five male lifetime sexual partners. Recruitment goals were 25 study participants in a four and a half month period. In addition to traditional recruitment strategies (flyers and media advertising, specific training of the recruitment team and adequate choice of recruitment sites)-engagement of local leaders in the MSM community formed a crucial part of the strategy. Special consideration was given to confidentiality and respect for study participants and a Bill of Participant Rights was developed as an explicit commitment to respect and acceptance.
RESULTS: In total 723 MSM were initially contacted, 243 filled out the recruitment questionnaire, of which 151 met the criteria to be invited to the clinical examination. After clinical examination and interviews with the recruitment team, 131 fulfilled the inclusion criteria, of whom 73 were enrolled in the study - nearly triple the recruitment goal. Among the initial recruitment strategies (application of the screening questionnaire) attending meetings with MSM activist organizations was the most successful (326), followed by recruitment at bars and dance clubs (107).
LIMITATIONS: The recruitment strategies should be formally evaluated for their effectiveness to identify those which are most successful. In addition, future studies should consider the evaluation of study participants' perceptions of the recruitment strategies.
CONCLUSIONS: Recruiting MSM in a developing country such as Mexico presented multiple challenges. We recommend that future studies actively engage the local MSM community and pay special attention to designing recruitment strategies that guarantee the confidentiality of and respect for participants.
For the full study, please click here.
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
URGENT - Please help a young gay Mexican be released from detention

Friends,
My colleagues and I are urgently trying to raise $3,000 to get a young gay Mexican man released from detention, where he's being beaten and abused by other inmates. More details follow:
Jose is a 21 year old gay Mexican who is currently detained by U.S. immigration authorities in Chicago. When Jose was 15, a close relative abducted him and forced him into sexual slavery in a brothel in Mexico. For two years, Jose's abusers drugged him and forced him to perform sexual acts with an average of five "clients" per day. Jose escaped when a friend visited the brothel and took pity on him. Jose lived in hiding in various locations throughout Mexico for the next couple years, and was eventually able to flee to the United States in 2007.
Jose was recently apprehended by the immigration authorities and he is now detained in the gym of an over-crowded prison, sharing a space with 50 other men, most of whom come from Latin American countries. Recently, Jose has been threatened by other inmates because of his sexuality. This morning, Jose was attacked by another inmate without provocation. Jose is traumatized and he is now living in fear of further attacks while he is in detention.
Jose is now applying for asylum. U.S. law recognizes sexual orientation as a grounds for asylum, and Jose's lawyers at Heartland Alliance's National Immigrant Justice Center believe he has a strong chance of success. Unfortunately, the law mandates the continued detention of asylum-seekers like Jose, and requires a bond to secure their release. Jose's bond has been set at $3,000, an amount he is unable to pay. Jose has no family in the U.S., and his family in Mexico has rejected him for being gay. Heartland Alliance is seeking donations for a revolving loan fund (to be repaid by Jose) to secure Jose's release from detention. Donations are tax-deductible, and will contribute to a fund for especially vulnerable asylum seekers. Any funds contributed for Jose release will, in the future, be used to obtain the release of other individuals fleeing persecution on account of their sexual orientation.
Checks made out to Heartland Alliance can be sent to my attention (memo: Urgent Asylum Seeker Release Fund) at the address below. Please forward this appeal to others who might be able to help, as well. We hope to raise these funds by the end of this week to move Jose to safety as quickly as possible.
Many thanks,
Sean
--------------------------------------------
Sean Casey
Coordinator, Global Equality Network
Director, Global HIV Initiatives
208 S. LaSalle Street
Suite 1818
Chicago, IL 60604
www.heartlandalliance.org
Friday, August 8, 2008
Caught by the paparazzi at AIDS 2008

Friday, August 1, 2008
Click 'n Learn - "Making Anal Sex Safer for MSM in the Developing World"

For your ease and convenience, the slides are available in PDF format on the IRMA website here, under Community Presentations.
IRMA presenters also unveiled the brand new Spanish-language version of our "Less Silence, More Science" report. Titled "Menos Silencio, Más Ciencia" the new translated document may be found on the IRMA website here.
Read the news release here.
You can view other "Click 'n Learn" presentations on the blog here.
Thursday, July 31, 2008
JOIN US - A Conversation with Author Elizabeth Pisani in Mexico City
and
International Rectal Microbicide Advocates
cordially invite you to join us
on the occasion of the
XVII International AIDS Conference for
Elizabeth Pisani
6:30-8:00 pm
at the Hotel Camino Real Mexico in the Guanajuato Room. The Hotel Camino Real is located in the Polanco area of Mexico City on Mariano Escobado Avenue.

Writer-scientist Elizabeth Pisani’s, "The Wisdom of Whores – Bureaucrats, Brothels and the Business of AIDS” is a kumbaya-free must read for anyone in the HIV/AIDS field. The book openly challenges you to re-examine your turf in “AIDS.inc," wherever your spot on the trough may be, and seriously question the billions of dollars being spent in the service of… what, exactly? Pisani’s take is that prevention, specifically prevention among gay men, injection drug users, and sex workers, is horribly neglected due to the questionable global strategy of making AIDS “everyone’s problem.” This generalization doesn’t hold true in most of the world, she says, and governments and funders have used it to spend their largesse among those least at risk, conveniently ignoring the politically unpopular messiness of sex, gay sex and drugs. Pisani's blunt account spares no one and offers all of us a chance to reflect on the current state of funding priorities for HIV prevention. For more information about Elizabeth Pisani and her book, please visit, her website.
Monday, July 28, 2008
AIDS2008.com - Your Community Connection to the 2008 International AIDS Conference

AIDS2008.com is an independent community resource sponsored by Community HIV/AIDS Mobilization Project (CHAMP) for the 2008 International AIDS Conference.
From July 21 through the end of the conference, AIDS2008.com will be a home for community bloggers and other journalists reporting from and about the plenaries, workshops, sessions, exhibits, and satellite/affiliated events at the XVII International AIDS Conference.
IRMA's Jim Pickett will be providing content among dozens of others.
Pickett will also be blogging for Positively Aware as well as right here, the only blog in the WWW devoted to rectal microbicides.
So many blogs, so little time!
Tuesday, July 1, 2008
Your Roadmap to XVII International AIDS Conference

The International AIDS Conference is held every two years, and in 2008 will take place in México City, México. The conference brings together nearly 25,000 activists, researchers, policymakers and government officials, making it the largest regular conference on any health or development issue.
The 2008 conference has a program that includes many satellites, special sessions, abstracts and skills building sessions on a range of topics, including HIV prevention research and advocacy. AVAC (AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition) has begun to compile a list of HIV prevention research-related events, forming the basis of its HIV Prevention Research Roadmap. The roadmap is a work in progress and will continually be updated in the days and weeks leading up to the conference.
Are you planning a related event that we haven’t included? If so, please let AVAC know at avac@avac.org, and we’ll add it to the roadmap.
Click to download the Roadmap:
- HIV Prevention Research at XVII International AIDS Conference
- HIV Prevention Research at XVII International AIDS Conference: In brief