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Examining experiences of gender identities, roles, and relations among men with same-gender sexual histories
Implications of gender nonconformity on access to quality healthcare in urban Ghana
Apreku, A., Abu-Ba'are, G. R., Dada, D., Foster, M., Stockton, M. A., Aidoo-Frimpong, G. A., Kuffour, O. F. O., Adjei, G., Manu, A., Torpey, K., Nyblade, L., Nelson, L. E., & Logie, C. H. (2025). Examining experiences of gender identities, roles, and relations among men with same-gender sexual histories: Implications of gender nonconformity on access to quality healthcare in urban Ghana. Journal of Urban Health: Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine, 102(2), 413-422. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11524-025-00964-1
Globally, MSM experience severe health disparities, including an increased risk of HIV acquisition. In Ghana's urban centers, these disparities are influenced by intersectional stigma related to sexuality and gender nonconformity, yet limited research exists on the role of gender in driving stigma in the day-to-day interactions of MSM. This study is aimed at understanding (1) the experiences of gender identity and roles among MSM in Ghana and (2) how these experiences of gender shape daily urban life in Ghanaian social interactions, including interpersonal interactions in healthcare settings. We conducted a qualitative description using secondary data generated from focus groups and in-depth interviews with adult MSM and health care workers in Accra and Kumasi, Ghana. Data were analyzed using qualitative content analysis. We identified five factors that describe the experiences of gender roles, identities, and relations and identified one theme regarding the influence of gender on MSM daily life. First, understandings of gender roles were influenced by local binary gendered expectations regarding (1) appearance and presentation, (2) physical characteristics and personality traits, and (3) household and community responsibilities. The experience of gender identity was informed by perceptions of its (4) relationship to or (5) independence from physical anatomy. In Ghana, men's gender nonconformity and its linkages to discrimination are complex, context dependent, and evolving. The interplay between gender nonconformity and same-gender sex stigma undermines access to quality health care and threatens the well-being of Ghanaian MSM.
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