(Press-News.org) A major new international study has found that young adults in low- and middle-income countries who are sex workers, gay men, transgender or living with HIV are facing a surge in online abuse - from harassment and blackmail to the non-consensual sharing of intimate images.
Researchers from The University of Warwick’s Centre for Interdisciplinary Methodologies warn this abuse is becoming increasingly normalised and is moving between online and in-person threats, with most victims having little access to support or justice.
The study — the largest of its kind — focuses on Colombia, Ghana, Kenya and Vietnam, and reveals how stigma, harassment, digital exclusion and fear are creating major barriers to accessing essential health information and support online for some of society’s most marginalised groups.
More than 300 young adults aged 18 to 30, along with 41 experts and leaders from UN agencies, governments, HIV support networks and civil society, were interviewed for the study.
The research was carried out by an international consortium of academics, human rights lawyers, health advocates, young leaders, and community-led organisations, with support from The University of Warwick’s Centre for Interdisciplinary Methodologies and funding from Fondation Botnar, a Swiss foundation.
The consortium included the Ghana Network of Persons living with HIV, the Global Network of People Living with HIV, Kenya Legal & Ethical Issues Network on HIV and AIDS, Privacy International (UK), Restless Development, STOPAIDS, Universidad de los Andes (Colombia) and the Vietnam Network of People Living with HIV.
The research comes as the World Health Organization (WHO) reviews its Global Strategy on Digital Health, which aims to help countries integrate digital health tools into their healthcare systems to improve delivery, reduce inequalities and promote health equity. It also follows repeated calls from the UN for online platforms to be regulated to stop the spread of harmful misinformation and abuse, including a Global Digital Compact approved in 2024.
Key findings:
Young adults described a wide range of obstacles to safely accessing health information and support online:
Cost and connectivity: In Kenya and Ghana, participants described being forced to choose between buying food or mobile data. Some sex workers and young women fall into debt trying to stay online, cutting them off from both income and essential health support.
Stigma and exclusion: In Colombia, some transgender participants say they avoid social media altogether due to frequent harassment. In Vietnam, fear of being "outed" as a person living with HIV has led many to self-censor online.
Digital gender divide: Young women reported having to rely on male partners for access to phones or mobile data, and said restrictive gender norms were limiting their digital freedom
Surveillance fears: Across all four countries, participants fear their online activities might be monitored by their family or community, especially for those who have no choice but to share phones. In Ghana, where a draconian anti-homosexuality bill is progressing through Parliament, young adults fear being reported to authorities if they are identified online as part of a sexual minority
Online abuse: Over three-quarters of participants described online abuse against themselves or friends, including stalking, blackmail, extortion, and violent threats, particularly among women, LGBTQ+ individuals and sex workers. Some described how this abuse carries over into in-person encounters and is increasingly seen as a normal part of life. Few who reported abuse were able to access support or see any meaningful action from police, law enforcement or tech companies.
Resilience: Young activists described relying on community networks for support and advice, and shared visions for the digital future.
In Ghana, a gay man was ambushed by attackers after being lured through a fake online romantic conversation.
In Vietnam, a young man was blackmailed after hackers sent doctored images to his contacts.
In Colombia, transgender sex workers reported being stalked and attacked after their phone numbers and photos were reposted from one escort site to another without their knowledge or consent.
In Kenya, a young woman said she was evicted at just 14 years old, when a healthcare worker accidentally revealed her HIV status via a text reminder sent to a phone the young woman shared with family.
Many young adults told the researchers that reporting abuse does not help and can even make things worse. In Ghana, one participant said a friend who reported an assault was questioned by police about being in a same-sex relationship.
The UN recognises access to online health information and support as a fundamental part of the right to health. But the study reveals how far this right remains out of reach for many.
Professor Sara (Meg) Davis, the report’s lead researcher at The University of Warwick’s Centre for Interdisciplinary Methodologies, said:
“The issues we’ve documented have real consequences, not just for physical health, but for mental wellbeing, access to services, and young adults’ futures. We believe in the power of digital health, but this is a wake-up call that governments, UN agencies and others need to hear. Young adults are paying the cost, literally and psychologically, of connecting online so that they can access information and support for their health.
“Recent cuts to Overseas Development Assistance funding in the United States, United Kingdom and Europe mean that global institutions that were at the forefront of this work are faltering, and the likelihood of countries meeting the Sustainable Development Goals is in jeopardy.”
Dr. Bernard Koomson, co-author of the report and a postdoctoral fellow at The University of Warwick’s Centre for Interdisciplinary Methodologies (CIM), said:
“Young adults in our study are clear that they want to use digital tools to support their health, but not at the expense of their privacy, safety or dignity. Their experiences highlight that government regulation is falling behind the pace of digital innovation.”
Mike Podmore, Chief Executive Officer at STOPAIDS, said:
“The growing use of digital technologies in the global HIV response has the potential to advance the right to health—but young people living with and affected by HIV are facing online harms that deepen existing inequalities. This abuse undermines their wellbeing and ability to access digital health services or advocate for their rights.”
Dr. Catalina Gonzalez, a research scientist at Center for Sustainable Development Goals for Latin America and the Caribbean (CODS), Universidad de los Andes in Colombia,, said:
“Our report calls for a bold reimagining of digital inclusion — one that empowers marginalized voices, protects against harm, and builds a future where technology serves as a force for equity, dignity, and opportunity for all.”
Allan Maleche, Executive Director of The Kenya Legal & Ethical Issues Network on HIV and AIDS (KELIN), said:
"Digital health must be grounded in human rights, equity, and inclusion. The Digital Health and Rights Project underscores the urgent need for legal and policy reforms to ensure access, privacy, and protection from tech-enabled abuse, especially for youth and communities living with HIV."
Dong Duc Thanh, Chairman of the Vietnam Network of People living with HIV (VNP+), said:
For young people living with HIV and young key populations, the digital space can sometimes feel unsafe, with risks like stigma, discrimination and breaches of privacy. To make sure technology becomes a source of strength and empowerment for every young person, we must come together to create a digital world that is safe, fair, and inclusive — where every voice is heard, and no one is left behind."
The study calls on health ministries, lawmakers and the World Health Organization, to:
Prioritise the right to digital inclusion to tackle health inequality; and ensure health services remain available through both digital and non-digital channels, to avoid excluding those without internet access,
Take urgent action against Technology-Facilitated Abuse (TFA), using a survivor-centred approach in which survivors have a central voice in decision-making. Governments must strengthen laws, train law enforcement and hold tech companies accountable through effective regulation,
Strengthen digital privacy protections by enforcing strong data protection laws, and informing the public about their rights and available remedies when those rights are infringed, and
Invest in youth leadership and civil society by ensuring young adults have a meaningful role in shaping digital health policies and strategies, including the next Global Health Strategy.
The researchers are launching the report at a webinar on 12 May at 2pm UK time. They are also holding an online and in-person panel discussion at the World Health Assembly in Geneva on May 21 with UN agencies and youth leaders.
END
Researchers from The University of Warwick warn marginalized young adults in low- and middle-income countries face “growing online abuse”
2025-05-12
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Credit ratings are a key check on CEO overconfidence in corporate acquisitions
2025-05-12
Overconfident chief executives and their risky behaviours can be partly restrained through credit ratings, new research finds.
Researchers led by Bangor University in Wales in the United Kingdom and other institutions including Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh, Scotland, Vlerick Business School in Brussels, Belgium and The University of Aberdeen in Scotland found that the creditworthiness of a company can hugely influence how its chief executive behaves – especially during corporate mergers and acquisitions (M&A).
The research, which is published in the journal, European Financial Management, is based on data from 916 firms in the United States who were rated by American ...
Can the U.S. develop a strong national science diplomacy strategy?
2025-05-12
In a new editorial in the AAAS publication Science & Diplomacy, Kimberly Montgomery, Director of International Affairs and Science Diplomacy at AAAS, reflects on whether the United States should develop a national science diplomacy strategy amid significant change to U.S. federal policy. Montgomery believes that the Trump administration should develop such a strategy – to help define a vision and direction for the U.S. It should outline how related policies “can advance U.S. diplomatic objectives, including fostering economic growth,” she writes. “And that strategy should detail how it will work with the private ...
Failure to focus on covid suppression led to avoidable UK deaths, says expert
2025-05-11
Early in the covid-19 pandemic, the failure of UK government advisers to follow World Health Organization (WHO) advice and emerging evidence from East Asia that suppression could bring the virus under control quickly led to avoidable UK deaths, argues an expert in The BMJ today.
Suppression aims to avoid national lockdowns and maintain economic activity for most of the population by introducing surveillance systems to bring new outbreaks under control quickly, thus reducing the reproductive rate of infection (R0) to below 1 and ...
GLP-1 receptor agonists show anti-cancer benefits beyond weight loss
2025-05-11
New research being presented at this year’s European Congress on Obesity (ECO) in Malaga, Spain (11-14 May) and published in the journal eClinicalMedicine finds that first generation weight-loss medications like liraglutide and exenatide appear to show anti-cancer benefits beyond weight loss.
“Our study found a similar incidence of obesity-related cancer among patients treated with first-generation glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1s) and with bariatric surgery over an average of ...
Childhood obesity can have long-term consequences on employment and study prospects, Swedish study finds
2025-05-11
Individuals who lived with obesity as children are less likely to be in work or studying in their mid-20s than their peers, new research being presented at year’s European Congress on Obesity (ECO 2025) has found.
They are also more likely to be on long-term sick leave, the Swedish study of the long-term labour market outcomes of childhood obesity found.
“Rates of childhood obesity are higher in individuals from lower socio-economic backgrounds than in those from higher socio-economic positions,” explains Dr Emilia Hagman, of the Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
“The reasons for this are complex but one contributing factor may be ...
Bigger bellies in childhood linked to development of metabolic and heart health risk by 10 years old
2025-05-11
New research being presented at this year’s European Congress on Obesity (ECO) in Malaga, Spain (11-14 May) reveals that adverse waist-to-height ratio trajectories (a marker for central obesity) during childhood may increase cardiometabolic and cardiovascular risk at 10 years old.
Notably, children with gradually increasing central obesity from birth were more likely to show early signs of metabolic and cardiovascular risk by age 10. This included elevated blood pressure and higher levels of biomarkers linked to systemic inflammation and metabolic dysfunction, ...
Manuel Heitor to share perspectives on the future of research in Europe at launch of EndoCompass
2025-05-11
Endocrine diseases affect millions of people in Europe, yet research into hormone health remains underfunded and fragmented. EndoCompass aims to change this. By identifying key research priorities and knowledge gaps, the roadmap will guide future studies, funding programmes and policy decisions at European and national levels. Although the full publication is still to come, two dedicated sessions at the Joint Congress will offer an exclusive preview:
• On Sunday 11 May, a Scientific Symposium will introduce key findings from ...
Five minutes exposure to junk food marketing results in children consuming 130 kcals more per day, regardless of media advertising type
2025-05-10
Exposure to junk food advertisements (relative to non-food) results in children and adolescents consuming significantly more calories during the day, regardless of the type of media advertising, according to a randomised crossover trial being presented at this year’s European Congress on Obesity (ECO) in Malaga, Spain (11-14 May).
The study found that 7–15 year-olds exposed to just 5 minutes of adverts for foods high in saturated fats, sugar, and/or salt (HFSS) consumed on average 130 kcals per day extra, which is equivalent to the calories in two slices of bread.
The timely research is presented as many countries across Europe and globally are considering ...
Key brain areas are larger in teenagers with abdominal obesity
2025-05-10
Several areas of the brain, including regions that play a critical role in learning and memory and in the control of emotions, are larger in adolescents who are living with obesity, new research being presented at year’s European Congress on Obesity (ECO 2025) has found.
The finding, from a study of thousands of teenagers in the US, raises concerns that obesity affects not only physical health but also learning, memory and control of emotions, says lead researcher Dr Augusto César F. De Moraes, of UTHealth Houston School of Public Health in Austin, Department of Epidemiology, Texas, USA. ...
3-month program of time-restricted eating at any time of the day supports long-term weight loss in adults with overweight or obesity
2025-05-10
Three months of time-restricted eating (TRE), irrespective of whether it is earlier or later in the day, may be a promising strategy for sustaining long-term weight loss in adults with overweight or obesity, according to preliminary results of a randomised controlled trial being presented at this year’s European Congress on Obesity (ECO) in Malaga, Spain (11-14 May).
“Our study found that restricting the eating window to 8 hours at any time of the day for 3 months can result in significant weight ...