Men who have sex with men in Great Britain: comparison of a self-selected internet sample with a national probability sample
- 10 November 2006
- journal article
- Published by BMJ in Sexually Transmitted Infections
- Vol. 83 (3) , 200-205
- https://doi.org/10.1136/sti.2006.023283
Abstract
Objectives: To compare the characteristics of a self-selected, convenience sample of men who have sex with men (MSM) recruited through the internet with MSM drawn from a national probability survey in Great Britain. Methods: The internet sample (n = 2065) was recruited through two popular websites for homosexual men in Great Britain in May and June 2003. This sample was compared with MSM (n = 117) from the National Survey of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles (Natsal), a probability sample survey of adults resident in Great Britain conducted between May 1999 and February 2001. Results: No significant differences were observed between the samples on a range of sociodemographic and behavioural variables (p>0.05). However, men from the internet sample were younger (p<0.001) and more likely to be students (p = 0.001), but less likely to live in London (p = 0.001) or report good health (p = 0.014). Although both samples were equally likely to report testing for HIV, men from the internet sample were more likely to report a sexually transmitted infection in the past year (16.9% v 4.8%, adjusted odds ratio 4.14, 95% CI 1.76 to 9.74; p = 0.001), anal intercourse (76.9% v 63.3%; p = 0.001) and unprotected anal intercourse in the past 3 months (45% v 36.6%; p = 0.064). Conclusions: The internet provides a means of recruiting a self-selected, convenience sample of MSM whose social and demographic characteristics are broadly similar to those of MSM drawn from a national probability survey. However, estimates of high-risk sexual behaviour based on internet convenience samples are likely to overestimate levels of sexual risk behaviour in the wider MSM population.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Meta-analytic Examination of Online Sex-Seeking and Sexual Risk Behavior Among Men Who Have Sex With MenSexually Transmitted Diseases, 2006
- Increases in HIV-Related Sexual Risk Behavior Among Community Samples of Gay Men in London and GlasgowJAIDS Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes, 2006
- Men who have sex with men: a comparison of a probability sample survey and a community based studySexually Transmitted Infections, 2006
- High-risk sexual behaviour among London gay men: no longer increasingAIDS, 2005
- Biases in internet sexual health samples: Comparison of an internet sexuality survey and a national sexual health survey in SwedenSocial Science & Medicine, 2005
- A new meeting place: chatting on the Internet, e-dating and sexual risk behaviour among Dutch men who have sex with menAIDS, 2005
- Gay men who look for sex on the Internet: is there more HIV/STI risk with online partners?AIDS, 2005
- Undetectable viral load is associated with sexual risk taking in HIV serodiscordant gay couples in SydneyAIDS, 2005
- Substance use and high-risk sex among men who have sex with men: a national online study in the USAAIDS Care, 2004
- The Young Men's Survey: methods for estimating HIV seroprevalence and risk factors among young men who have sex with men.1996