Are Hookup Apps Fueling A Spike In Sexually Transmitted Diseases?

Are Hookup Apps Fueling A Spike In Sexually Transmitted Diseases?
More gay men in the U.S. and abroad are testing positive for certain STDS, and sites like Grindr are catching the heat.

This week, British public health officials set off a flurry of headlines after blaming the rising rates of syphilis and gonorrhea in the United Kingdom on apps that allow people to find prospective partners as easily as takeout pad thai.

“Thanks to Grindr or Tinder, you can acquire chlamydia in five minutes,” said Peter Greenhouse, spokesman for the British Association for Sexual Health and HIV, according to the Daily Mail.

According to the CDC, syphilis in the U.S. “remains a major health problem, with increased cases occurring among gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men.” For gonorrhea, current rates of infection point to more gay and bisexual men contracting the disease or becoming aware of their status, the CDC says.

New apps have made casual hookups easier. But some sexual health experts say the reasons for the jump in STD infections are more complex, and it makes more sense for public health officials to embrace these online tools as an outreach method than to point fingers.

In an interview with The Huffington Post, Greenhouse pointed to a study published last summer by the peer-reviewed journal “Sexually Transmitted Infections.” It shows that gay men who use apps with geographic networking have a greater chance of testing positive for gonorrhea and chlamydia, compared with men who pick up dates at bars or on hookup websites.

“If you can find somebody who is within a couple of yards, then you’re bound to be able to meet them quicker,” he said.

But the people behind some of the apps argue that the real story is more complicated. Carl Sandler, the founder of hookup apps Daddyhunt and Mister, says public health officials could actually use the apps to reach those most at risk of STDs and encourage them to get tested and treated. Sandler said he has taken some measures with Daddyhunt and Mister to promote safe sex. He asks people to sign a code of conduct, which “basically says they’ll take care of themselves and their sexual partners,” and to state if they’re open to dating someone of any status. “We’ve found that very very few people are willing to publicly disclose if they’re HIV positive,” he noted.

Sandler said he is frustrated by public health officials who point fingers at apps, rather than offering to work with them to reduce STD infections. “We can’t tell people ‘don’t suck dick,’ but we can say, get tested regularly, we can say, be aware of the signs that you might have something, and most importantly, we can tell people, anyone who has something should get treated as soon as possible,” he said. “That’s what’s going to reduce the risk of transmission.”

While some American public health experts have started working with apps and website owners to develop better sexual health measures online, Sandler says he is “disappointed” by the pace. “What public health needs to do is figure out what interventions work, and what doesn’t work,” he said. “As app owners, we don’t have that expertise.”

Public health experts agreed with this sentiment. Sandler was one of seven owners of hookup apps and websites who participated in a meeting last fall hosted by the San Francisco AIDS Foundation and amfAR. (A representative from Grindr, which did respond to request for comment, also attended.) At the meeting, the group of experts and owners brainstormed the best ways to encourage safe sex in the world of online hookups. Dan Wohlfeiler, a professor at the University of California, San Francisco, who has been working on STD prevention since 1987, said he found the meeting very encouraging.

“Public health has always said ‘we need to go where the people are,’ and by working with these sites we can do just that,” Wohlfeiler said.

Dr. Stephanie Cohen, the medical director of the city clinic for the San Francisco Department of Public Health, said she is not convinced the apps are fueling a spike in STDs.

“There’s no doubt that the apps facilitate sex partnering and make it easier to meet sex partners,” Cohen said, “and there’s also no doubt that the STD rates are rising among gay men and men who have sex with men. But whether there’s really a causal relationship between the two is not clear.”

Wohlfeiler agreed. Among the men in the study Greenhouse cited, Wohlfeiler pointed out that using crystal meth was much more strongly associated with getting STDs than using apps.

“For years we have tried to understand what the reasons are for why disease transmission continues to increase,” he said. “There so many factors that go into it, and no one factor can explain it. But what we do know is that if guys are going online and meeting partners, then it’s up to us to figure out how to bring together the best of public health knowledge with the expertise that the web owners bring to make sure those environments can do their best for prevention.”

www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/01/09/hookup-apps_n_6439162.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

PHOTOS: Hot Jocks Drop Trou For The Ali Forney Center

PHOTOS: Hot Jocks Drop Trou For The Ali Forney Center

Credit Marco Ovando6

Boxers Bar, America’s Gay Sports Bar teamed up with Matinee USA to put out a sexy new calendar featuring 12 sexy models and four centerfolds with guys in the in their boxers.  The models were photographed by acclaimed photographer Marco Ovando and sponsored by Stoli Vodka. The calendars, available at both Boxers locations in NYC and the new Boxers PHL, retail for $20 and 100 percent of the proceeds will go to The Ali Forney Center. Jake Resnicow, the promoter of Maintee USA stated “it’s important to give back to our community and those who need it.” The Ali Forney Center helps homeless LGBT youth by rescuing them from the streets and placing them in safe, homelike environments.

Images by Marco Ovando

Credit Marco Ovando5 Credit Marco Ovando4 Credit Marco Ovando3 Credit Marco Ovando2 Credit Marco Ovando1Credit Marco Ovando7

 

jjkeyes

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Michael Sam Reportedly Engaged to Boyfriend Vito Cammisano

Michael Sam Reportedly Engaged to Boyfriend Vito Cammisano

Sam
(instagram)

Unconfirmed reports are coming in that Michael Sam is now engaged to longtime boyfriend Vito Cammisano.

TMZ writes that it’s “unclear who asked who … but one of Vito’s friends (who was on the University of Missouri swim team with Vito) is already congratulating the couple about it on Twitter … and Sam “liked” her post.”

Page Six reports the couple got engaged in Rome during their European vacation through Italy and Spain. Sam turned 25 on Wednesday. 

Congrats to the happy couple if reports are true!

Watch a clip of Sam discussing his thoughts on marriage for last month’s Oprah Winfrey Network documentary (and more shots from the European vacation), AFTER THE JUMP

 

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Wheels up for Spain!!! Happy New Year 

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Happy New Year from @vitcamm and @mikeysam52 #2015 #madrid 

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Enjoying our last evening in Madrid 🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸!!! Next stop Roma

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Roman Coliseum 

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What a beautiful view from the top of St. Peter’s Basilica!!! Happy 25th birthday to me

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Kyler Geoffroy

www.towleroad.com/2015/01/michael-sam-reportedly-engaged-to-boyfriend-vito-cammisano.html

Interview With Trans Activist and Icon Calpernia Addams

Interview With Trans Activist and Icon Calpernia Addams

2015-01-08-CalperniabyJoseGuzman012.jpg
Photo by Jose Guzman

In putting together a collection of interviews with compelling members of the queer community, one would be remiss to leave out trans activist, writer, singer/songwriter, actress, coach, and comedian Calpernia Addams. I was fortunate that she agreed to answer a few questions, and even more fortunate that she included accompanying links. (Thanks, Calpernia!) Take a look at what she has to say about her life growing up, the politics of language, and her history as a tireless advocate for equality.

How did you envision your future when you were growing up?

I really struggled with being a creative, intellectual, dreamer type growing up in pre-Internet, 1980s Nashville, and every thought felt judged by the fundamentalist Christian cult my family was in. I was socially awkward, poor and not very good-looking, so I spent a lot of my time walking alone in the woods and daydreaming, or lost in a book at the local library, imagining I was someone else. I imagined that I would become a musician and backpack across Europe. In my heart of hearts, I imagined myself as someone beautiful and mysterious like the femme fatales in the black-and-white movies I watched with my mother. I just never thought that would be a possibility.

As a kid you began performing bluegrass and gospel-style fiddle in church. Was music something you thought of as a future career path?

Music was something fundamental that everyone in our family just did. It was a basic skill, like cooking: Every kid learns at least how to make a grilled-cheese sandwich; some go on to become chefs. I play about seven or eight instruments now, but I wish I’d taken it even more seriously when I was young and my brain still worked well. I’m finishing up my first acoustic album, produced by my friend Patrick Wolf, the awesome, indie, cult superstar (and openly gay artist) whose music is so inspirational to me. It’s going to be sort of like if Emmylou Harris and early Loretta Lynn had a daughter who hung out with Kate Bush and Lana Del Rey a lot.

You posted a great YouTube video a few years ago in which you discuss the stupid questions some people ask you. How often do you still get asked those questions, and how do you handle them if and when it happens?

When I made “Bad Questions to Ask a Transsexual,” YouTube was still pretty new, and there weren’t many “YouTube stars” like now. Views happened more organically, with people finding and sharing videos rather than big production teams and corporations running things like mini television shows with marketing experts. I started transitioning almost 20 years ago, and I kept hearing the same condescending and stupid things over and over. One night I came home from a photo shoot, had two glasses of whiskey, and decided to do a video based on an old list of bad questions I had made up. It was improvised, and I was slightly buzzed, but I think I humorously said a lot of things that a lot of trans women had been feeling for a long time. Out of nowhere a YouTube staff member wrote to me and asked if I minded if they featured it on the front page of YouTube. I was like, “Yes, please!” And it ended up with a few million views (across two versions), one of the few LGBT-themed videos that got a million-plus views in those early days. A key difference between “Bad Questions” and the language police of today is that I didn’t tell people they couldn’t ask those questions; I just tried to make them afraid to ask those questions.

When the most recent “T” word debacle was in full swing, it seemed like everyone with access to a keyboard and the Internet was sounding off with their opinion. What would you say is the most important thing to learn from the controversy?

People need to know their history, allow others to self-identify, and at least try to toughen the fuck up over the small stuff. And you can tell them that comes from someone who lived through the ’80s and ’90s, fought in an actual war and lost someone dear to anti-gay violence. If your experience with the word comes from being “triggered” by it on Tumblr, then have a seat. I do not self-identify as a “tranny,” though I have used the term in protest against the thought police who want to reclassify it as a “slur.” I identify as a woman, though I will discuss being a woman who transitioned if it’s relevant or educational. But I stand strong for people’s right to self-identify, and long before the small, vocal crop of college kids and older, separatist trans women joined the queer community, there was a historical tradition of trans people and even drag entertainers who shortened “transgender,” “transsexual,” or “transvestite” to “tranny.” Many of these are trans people of color. (Also see RuPaul on “tranny.”) This word was a casual, fun self-identity for some people, most of whom have faced the most extreme violence and discrimination it is possible to direct at gender-nonconforming people, over many decades. Last year I saw a wave of newly queer, ahistorical, mostly white, middle- and upper-class trans women storm in, grab language they didn’t participate in or invent and try to outlaw it. I personally think they were just terrified that they might be associated with those “undesirables,” the drag queens and sex workers and impoverished trans women of color who happily used the word as a casual identity. By the way, I use the traditional definition of “transgender,” which is an umbrella term for anyone who crosses gender lines, including the drag queens so hated by the separatists.

You have worked closely with some high-profile actors to help them prepare for their roles portraying trans people on the big screen. How do you approach that situation, knowing that you will be seen (by some) as responsible for how the actor ultimately comes across?

Last year we saw some major strides forward for trans opportunities in media. Many of the things I’ve had to do in the past were as much damage prevention as anything: An artist wants to bring a trans story to life, and they are aware that they don’t have a lot of knowledge beyond the surface, so they seek out someone to consult. What outsiders often don’t consider is that the movie will be made whether I help or not. I can choose to give guidance and perspective, or I can say no and let them possibly make huge mistakes. Everyone I’ve consulted for has gone on to be nominated for, or win, a Golden Globe, an Oscar, an Emmy, and other awards as well. And of course, Jared Leto famously won his Oscar last year and surprised me by mentioning my name in his speech. There were a few vocal detractors of my work with Jared and others, but I mostly saw them as small minds with big megaphones. There was not a single detractor whom I’d objectively consider to be someone with an accomplished artistic perspective or background. Meanwhile, movies like Soldier’s Girl, Transamerica and Dallas Buyers Club have opened up the world to empathize with unique, authentic individual characters in the trans spectrum. I’ve known actual people like Jared’s “Rayon” character, and to the people who are embarrassed by poor, non-passing, HIV-positive, homeless trans people, I heartily say, “Fuck you.” Others are upset that trans people aren’t playing these roles. I am too, but thanks to these portrayals, new doors are opening (where they can). We are on a journey here. Thankfully, things are finally changing. Let’s not forget the work that went into those changes.

Andrea James and I have been working both behind the scenes and out front to improve these opportunities and perceptions for over a decade, alongside other dedicated trans people who see media as an important focus. It’s important to remember that however many awards and TV shows happen, there are hugely important issues being addressed by trans people outside the glamor of Hollywood too, as politician Dana Beyer reminded us recently.

One of my favorite things about you is how talented you are in so many different ways. Is there one particular variety of performance — comedy, singing, or acting — that you enjoy the most?

I love singing live in a speakeasy-, jazz-, or cabaret-type environment the most. Comedy is probably my second love. And I have another book in the early stages. I need to drink more coffee!

What are the biggest differences you notice between the crowds you perform for now and the crowds you started out performing for in Nashville?

I was a showgirl in the ’90s. The majority of people in Nashville were closeted, and being LGBT was still a very underground, rebellious identity. We had just lived through the ’80s, so people were fired up and getting a little more comfortable. There were protected and secretive support resources out there taking hold. It felt kind of rock-and-roll, countercultural, dangerous and cool to be lesbian and gay. Bucking gender norms was even scarier and more dangerous. Today you can take a college class on gender identity, subscribe to one of several LGBT-themed cable channels, attend your high school’s gay-straight alliance meetings. I mean, let’s not pretend it’s easy or safe to be LGBT now, but wow is it easier!

In addition to being an amazing performer, you are also among the best-known trans activists out there. What is the most difficult part of being looked at as an activist, and what is the most rewarding?

There was a time when simply being out qualified you as an activist. I came up in that time. I think those days are close to ending. It’s just not that radical to be out anymore, but I think it’s still important. I was thrust into the spotlight in 1999 when my boyfriend’s murder became national news, and I used that attention to work for justice for him. Since then, if anyone asks me to be somewhere for a cause and I can at all make it, I am there. That has resulted in work with PFLAG, NGLTF, SLDN, GLAAD — basically the entire alphabet soup of LGBT causes. I’ve waved in small-town pride parades in the South, I’ve spoken to Oxford University and C-SPAN, etc., etc., etc. That has all been very important to me. But the hard part of being an activist is that people want to hold me to a very grave and serious standard, when I am at heart a jazz-singing showgirl with a filthy, transgressive sense of humor and an ever-diminishing capacity to suffer fools gladly.

You’ve had speaking engagements and performances in countries all over the world. What has been the most surprising experience you’ve had abroad?

I’ve traveled the world quite a bit, so it’s hard to choose, but probably how sassy and cute the students were when I spoke at Oxford University. I expected them to be a bit stiffer. After the event I went out dancing with some of the young guys, and we had several rounds of tequila shots, then a breathtakingly beautiful girl studying microbiology walked me through the Harry Potter-esque cobblestone streets back to my historical hotel. It was magical.

Which of your many accomplishments makes you the most proud?

I get the most pleasure from singing live. I won’t speculate if the audience feels the same, but they keep booking me, so I keep showing up. The movie Soldier’s Girl has frozen the most painful moment of my life in time and does a great deal to keep that pain alive, but I am intensely proud that we were able to honor Barry Winchell’s life with that beautiful film.

What advice would you give to someone suffering from a lack of self-confidence?

Oh, God, I would tell them that you might have those feelings of self-doubt for the rest of your life, but so do all the great achievers in the world. The key is to just keep pushing forward. Jane Fonda once told me that if you don’t feel nervous before you go on stage, then you’re probably not invested in what you’re doing. Keep pushing on.

For more on Calpernia Addams, visit Calpernia.com, Facebook.com/calpernia, Twitter.com/calpernia, and YouTube.com/calperniaaddams.

www.huffingtonpost.com/michael-podell/interview-with-trans-activist-and-icon-calpernia-addams_b_6433346.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Want A Gay Child? This Doctor Says He Can Inject Your Baby With A Gay Gene!

Want A Gay Child? This Doctor Says He Can Inject Your Baby With A Gay Gene!

A baby getting an injection“When straight couples have children, the majority of them want their children to be straight as well,” Dr. William Strider at the Fertility Center of Chicago tells Daily Buzz Live. “That is why most straight parents have trouble accepting it when their children announce to them that they are gay.”

Um… OK?

“So it only makes sense,” Strider continues, “that same-sex couples would want children that carried out their same family values of homosexuality.”

Strider claims he has the unique ability to help same-sex parents biologically produce gay children or “gaybies.” The procedure is called Human Germline Manipulation. It allows doctors to genetically engineer a fetus’ X-chromosome gene by tinkering with the sperm and ovum during a surrogate conception. The X-chromosome is believed to have some impact on a person’s sexual orientation.

According to Strider, gay couples will soon have the option to change their straight baby into a gayby and “guarantee their same family values and acceptance throughout the next generation.”

But don’t think producing a gayby isn’t going to cost you. The rate for Human Germline Manipulation ranges from $12,000 to $15,000. Also, the procedure isn’t guaranteed. So you might be better off putting that 15K towards your kid’s college fund and then keeping your fingers crossed he turns out gay.

 

H/t: First To Know

Related stories:

Bad News For Bible Thumpers: New Evidence Confirms The “Gay Gene” Exists

WATCH: How Will Dads-To-Be React If Science Discovers A Gay Gene?

PHOTOS: Hot Gays In Jeans Have Gay Genes

Graham Gremore

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