INNOVATIVE PROGRAMMATIC APPROACHES TO HIV PREVENTION AND CARE SERVICES FOR GAY MEN, OTHER MEN WHO HAVE SEX WITH MEN (MSM)AND TRANSGENDER PERSONS USING INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY (ICT)

Written by: Darrin Adams, Kent Klindera, Christopher S Walsh and R. Cameron Wolf

Abstract: This Special Issue of Digital Culture & Education (DCE) provides innovative programmatic approaches to HIV prevention and care services for gay men, other men that have sex with men (MSM) and transgender persons using information and communication technology (ICT) at a time when these same populations are experiencing an alarming upward trend of new HIV infections. During a successful participatory consultation in Washington D.C. in May 2013 hosted by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and co-supported by the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), amfAR, the Foundation for AIDS Research, and the National Institutes of Mental Health (NIMH), representatives from Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, Latin America, Europe, Australia and the United States shared innovative uses of communication technology across HIV research, programs, outreach, advocacy and public-private partnerships. Believing it crucial to share their innovations more widely—through open-access channels—led us to working in partnership with these frontline workers, activists, researchers and educators to further document and share their technological innovations in different global contexts. Importantly, we prioritised working with frontline workers and activists by providing cyclical and targeted writing mentoring to assist them in writing about their successful digital interventions. Disseminating this timely work through open-access channels, like Digital Culture & Education (DCE) means that researchers in less resourced institutions, practitioners and activists in the field and the general public can better understand how ICT, particularly mobile technologies, provides unprecedented opportunities to more effectively reach and engage gay men, other MSM and transgender populations across the HIV prevention, testing, treatment and care cascade.

Keywords: HIV, gay men, men that have sex with men (MSM), transgender, Information and communication technology (ICT), HIV prevention, HIV treatment, Internet, communication, mHealth