News headlines about the app are pretty extreme:
-
EXPOSED: The seedy underbelly of hook-up apps (News.com.au, September 2012)
- A deadly dating game (China Daily, September 2012)
- Grindr: Welcome to the
World’s Biggest, Scariest Gay Bar (Vanity Fair, May 2011)
-
Popular gay dating app Grindr blamed for syphilis outbreak (Examiner.com,
August 2012)
In Grindr’s policies, there’s
nothing to be found promoting or discouraging unprotected sex. The app does prohibit “sexually explicit,
revealing, or overly suggestive photos,” as well as “nudity or physically
revealing clothing of any kind.” And, to Grindr’s credit, there is a Grindr Health page, which links to
resources for HIV and STD testing, as well as substance abuse resources. Throughout
the site, Grindr advocates user safety and responsibility.
Grindr has a reputation for being a booty call app. But is it? In a recent study [1] of Grindr users in West Hollywood and Long Beach, CA, researchers found that the most popular reasons for using Grindr were to kill time (84.3%)and make new friends (78.7%), followed by connecting with the gay community (64.5%) and meeting hook-ups (64.5%). Participants in the study were more likely to use condoms with partners they met on Grindr (59.8%) compared to partners they met elsewhere (41.9%).
So, that brings us back to our original question: is
it really Grindr that’s fueling HIV and STD epidemics? The app touts itself as
a platform for guys to meet other guys, and it’s being used heavily around the
world... but not necessarily to look for sex.
Many health agencies are starting to use Grindr and other hookup apps to talk to guys about getting testing. Who knows? Maybe you’ll see GO Atlanta on Grindr soon.
[1] Rice et al. Sex Risk among Young Men who have Sex with Men who use Grindr, a Smartphone Geosocial Networking Application. J AIDS Clinic Res 2012, S4.
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