Reactions to Testing HIV Negative: An Assessment of Measurement Invariance and Associations with Condomless Anal Sex among English and Spanish-speaking Latinx Sexual Minority Men in the United States

AbstractAmong the many effective prevention strategies, frequent HIV testing continues to be promoted to reduce the risk of HIV transmission among sexual minority men (SMM). Testing negative for HIV can result in varied reactions that influence subsequent HIV transmission behaviors, yet the extant research has primarily been conducted in English. The current study examined measurement invariance of a Spanish-translated Inventory of Reactions to Testing HIV Negative (IRTHN). The study also examined whether the IRTHN was associated with subsequent condomless anal sex. Data were drawn from 2,170 Latinx SMM subsample of the UNITE Cohort Study. We conducted a multigroup confirmatory factor analysis to test for measurement invariance between participants who opted to take the survey in English (n ā€‰=ā€‰2,024) and those who opted to take it in Spanish (nā€‰=ā€‰128). We also examined if the IRTHN is associated with subsequent CAS. The results were suggestive of partial invariance. The subscales ofLuck andInvulernability were associated with CAS at the 12-month follow-up. Practice and research-based implications are discussed.
Source: AIDS and Behavior - Category: Infectious Diseases Source Type: research