Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Gay Men, Sexuality and Mental Health After Pros...
View graph of relations

Gay Men, Sexuality and Mental Health After Prostate Cancer

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineMeeting abstract

Published

Standard

Gay Men, Sexuality and Mental Health After Prostate Cancer. / Dowsett, Gary; Duncan, Duane; Plooy, Daniel Du et al.
In: The Journal of Sexual Medicine, Vol. 14, No. Suppl. 4B, e248, 01.05.2017.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineMeeting abstract

Harvard

Dowsett, G, Duncan, D, Plooy, DD, Waling, A & Prestage, G 2017, 'Gay Men, Sexuality and Mental Health After Prostate Cancer', The Journal of Sexual Medicine, vol. 14, no. Suppl. 4B, e248. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsxm.2017.04.229

APA

Dowsett, G., Duncan, D., Plooy, D. D., Waling, A., & Prestage, G. (2017). Gay Men, Sexuality and Mental Health After Prostate Cancer. The Journal of Sexual Medicine, 14(Suppl. 4B), Article e248. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsxm.2017.04.229

Vancouver

Dowsett G, Duncan D, Plooy DD, Waling A, Prestage G. Gay Men, Sexuality and Mental Health After Prostate Cancer. The Journal of Sexual Medicine. 2017 May 1;14(Suppl. 4B):e248. doi: 10.1016/j.jsxm.2017.04.229

Author

Dowsett, Gary ; Duncan, Duane ; Plooy, Daniel Du et al. / Gay Men, Sexuality and Mental Health After Prostate Cancer. In: The Journal of Sexual Medicine. 2017 ; Vol. 14, No. Suppl. 4B.

Bibtex

@article{67356813b692466aaaec9535c3aa2455,
title = "Gay Men, Sexuality and Mental Health After Prostate Cancer",
abstract = "Introduction and purposeMuch research on men living with prostate cancer (PCa) has neglected gay men. Recent research, however, has shown marked differences between gay/bisexual men and heterosexual men in diagnosis, treatment, care and support. This paper will present new research addressing gaps that exist in our understanding of gay men{\textquoteright}s experiences. It will explore the implications for gay men, particularly in thinking better about their sexual recovery after PCa and its relation to mental health.Population sampleThe sample comprised 35 Australian gay men diagnosed and treated for PCa. Six male partners of such gay men were also recruited. Patient participants were 40 years and older, identified as gay men, and were diagnosed and treated for PCa at least six months previously. Partners were gay men of any age, and in relationships with gay men diagnosed and treated for PCa. All participants were fluent in English.MethodologyThis qualitative study used an interpretive case study methodology. The study involved individual, in-depth interviews. Mainstream PCa services and organisations, gay men{\textquoteright}s health organisations and social networks, and the Internet were used to recruit participants. Interviews were transcribed, verified for accuracy, and analysed thematically with the assistance of NVivo qualitative data analysis software package.",
author = "Gary Dowsett and Duane Duncan and Plooy, {Daniel Du} and Andrea Waling and Garrett Prestage",
year = "2017",
month = may,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.jsxm.2017.04.229",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
journal = "The Journal of Sexual Medicine",
number = "Suppl. 4B",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Gay Men, Sexuality and Mental Health After Prostate Cancer

AU - Dowsett, Gary

AU - Duncan, Duane

AU - Plooy, Daniel Du

AU - Waling, Andrea

AU - Prestage, Garrett

PY - 2017/5/1

Y1 - 2017/5/1

N2 - Introduction and purposeMuch research on men living with prostate cancer (PCa) has neglected gay men. Recent research, however, has shown marked differences between gay/bisexual men and heterosexual men in diagnosis, treatment, care and support. This paper will present new research addressing gaps that exist in our understanding of gay men’s experiences. It will explore the implications for gay men, particularly in thinking better about their sexual recovery after PCa and its relation to mental health.Population sampleThe sample comprised 35 Australian gay men diagnosed and treated for PCa. Six male partners of such gay men were also recruited. Patient participants were 40 years and older, identified as gay men, and were diagnosed and treated for PCa at least six months previously. Partners were gay men of any age, and in relationships with gay men diagnosed and treated for PCa. All participants were fluent in English.MethodologyThis qualitative study used an interpretive case study methodology. The study involved individual, in-depth interviews. Mainstream PCa services and organisations, gay men’s health organisations and social networks, and the Internet were used to recruit participants. Interviews were transcribed, verified for accuracy, and analysed thematically with the assistance of NVivo qualitative data analysis software package.

AB - Introduction and purposeMuch research on men living with prostate cancer (PCa) has neglected gay men. Recent research, however, has shown marked differences between gay/bisexual men and heterosexual men in diagnosis, treatment, care and support. This paper will present new research addressing gaps that exist in our understanding of gay men’s experiences. It will explore the implications for gay men, particularly in thinking better about their sexual recovery after PCa and its relation to mental health.Population sampleThe sample comprised 35 Australian gay men diagnosed and treated for PCa. Six male partners of such gay men were also recruited. Patient participants were 40 years and older, identified as gay men, and were diagnosed and treated for PCa at least six months previously. Partners were gay men of any age, and in relationships with gay men diagnosed and treated for PCa. All participants were fluent in English.MethodologyThis qualitative study used an interpretive case study methodology. The study involved individual, in-depth interviews. Mainstream PCa services and organisations, gay men’s health organisations and social networks, and the Internet were used to recruit participants. Interviews were transcribed, verified for accuracy, and analysed thematically with the assistance of NVivo qualitative data analysis software package.

U2 - 10.1016/j.jsxm.2017.04.229

DO - 10.1016/j.jsxm.2017.04.229

M3 - Meeting abstract

VL - 14

JO - The Journal of Sexual Medicine

JF - The Journal of Sexual Medicine

IS - Suppl. 4B

M1 - e248

ER -