Abstract:
Background: Same-sex attracted men in Tanzania are disproportionately affected by HIV. Drawing on qualitative research, the present study explores
healthcare providers’ perspectives on access to HIV-related healthcare services among same-sex attracted men.
Methods: A qualitative study was carried out among healthcare workers in in the cities of Dar es Salaam and Tanga in Tanzania between August 2018 and
October 2019. Fieldwork entailed qualitative interviewing, focus group discussions and participant observation. A purposive sampling strategy was used to
select study participants who varied with respect to age, education level, work experience, and the type and location of the facilities they worked in. Twentyfour
interviews and six focus group discussions were conducted.
Results: This paper describes four different discourses that were identied among healthcare workers with respect to their perception of access to healthcare
services for SSAM. One held that access to healthcare was not a major problem at all, another that some SSAM did not utilize healthcare services although
they were available, a third that some healthcare workers prevented SSAM from gaining access to healthcare and a fourth that healthcare for gender and
sexual minority persons was made dicult by structural barriers.
Conclusion: Although these are four rather different takes on the prevailing circumstances with respect to healthcare access for SSAM, we suggest that they
may all be ‘true’ in the sense that they grasp and highlight different aspects of the same realities.