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Paper Title

Sexual Violence and Chemsex among Substance-Using Sexual and Gender Minorities in Texas

Keywords

  • chemsex
  • sexual violence
  • sexual assault
  • intimate partner violence
  • substance use
  • methamphetamine
  • consent
  • sexual minority men
  • lgbtq+ health
  • drug-facilitated sex
  • sex parties
  • risk behaviors
  • texas
  • gagged
  • bdsm
  • kink
  • role play
  • fantasy
  • erotic
  • sex
  • masturbation
  • trauma
  • exploitation
  • coercion
  • sadism
  • health disparities
  • minority stress
  • sexual consent
  • queer health
  • power dynamics
  • vulnerability
  • psychosocial risk

Article Type

Original Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 56 | Issue : 14 | Page No : 2141-2150

Published On

September, 2021

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Abstract

Introduction Chemsex is the use of methamphetamine or other substances to enhance sexual experiences, and is most often associated with sexual minority men. Within the chemsex literature, questions of sexual violence emerge due, in part, to ambiguity about what constitutes consent within sexualized environments with co-occurring substance use. Methods To understand the context in which sexual violence occurs, data from an online survey of sexual and gender minority Texans were analyzed using bivariate and logistic regression (N = 1273), and qualitative interviews with substance-using sexual minority men from a separate sample were thematically analyzed (N = 22). Results Among survey participants, 12.8% experienced a form of sexual violence (10.1% experienced intimate partner violence and 7.6% experienced sexual assault). When participants were categorized based on past year substance use and sex party attendance, 48.0% of participants who used drugs and attended sex parties (a proxy for chemsex) experienced sexual violence (41.6% experienced intimate partner violence and 41.0% experienced sexual assault). When variables statistically significant at the bivariate-level were entered into logistic regression models, participants in the chemsex category were 12.5 [95% CI: 6.9, 22.8] times more likely to experience sexual violence. Substance-using sexual minority men experiencing sexual violence describe situations in which consent is difficult to revoke and sexual exploitation is likely to occur. Discussion Studies which more deeply explore the relationship between sexual and relationship violence and chemsex among sexual and gender minorities are needed. Particularly, the notion of consent needs further conceptualization in the context of drug use and sex parties.

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