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Inside the SHaG Lab: Dr. Matthew Numer鈥檚 research on sexual health and gender

Posted by Stephanie Brown on September 25, 2020 in News, Research
Dr. Matthew won the Early Career Research Excellence Award from the Faculty of Health. (Darren Calabrese photo)
Dr. Matthew won the Early Career Research Excellence Award from the Faculty of Health. (Darren Calabrese photo)

Dr. Matthew Numer (Associate Professor, School of Health and Human Performance) describes his educational background as diverse, which explains his research portfolio. Hailing from Pittsburgh, Dr. Numer taught social studies to middle schoolers and high schoolers and pursued his Masters in school counselling. A friend of his had connections to AV俱乐部, so he travelled to Halifax and completed an interdisciplinary PhD in Sociology and Health on history of HIV and gay men in Nova Scotia.

He started teaching a human sexuality course and was later offered a position in the School of Health and Human Performance鈥檚 Health Promotion program. In 2018, Dr. Numer conceptualized the SHaG (Sexual Health and Gender) lab.

The SHaG lab is the umbrella under which Dr. Numer and associated students research LGBTQ health, sexualized violence, Indigenous boys and men's health, and e-learning.

Connecting Indigenous boys and men to the land and community

In February of this year, Dr. Numer received a CIHR Operating Grant: HIV/AIDS and STBBI Community-Based Research for his research project Indigenous Masculinities and Sexual Health: Exploring community-driven interventions among boys and men through land- based methodologies, totalling $449,896. This is the second project affiliated with this research.

Dr. Numer and his team are working with the Mi鈥檏maq Native Friendship Centre鈥檚 Seven Sparks program which facilitates Indigenous men鈥檚 transition from jail back into the community, and Healing Our Nations, which looks at HIV within our communities, two-spirited men and other LGBTQS identities. He says he was brought into the project because of his background in masculinities, and how gender plays a role in men鈥檚 health 鈥 specifically with Indigenous men.

鈥淲e framed it around a very holistic way of looking at sexual health, you can鈥檛 address it without going back to the colonial roots, the trauma,鈥 he says.

In the previous research project, Dr. Numer and his team held community consultations, interviewing 10 men from the Seven Sparks program about their experience growing up. They talked about sexual health, gender relationships, and how people interact.

鈥淲e definitely heard there is capacity for resiliency despite challenge, a lot of positives that come from the community and rediscovering knowledge that has been suppressed through colonization. The impact of residential schools is ongoing. People were told things like the culture is not to be talked about, even things like basic knowledge around sexual health and bodies. There are things you feel like you should know, but when you disrupt them it鈥檚 hard, like what it means to be a man 鈥 a lot of people didn鈥檛 figure it out until later in life.鈥

Graphic recording by Susan MacLeod.

For this grant, the focus is connecting Indigenous boys and men to the land and community. There will be daytrips to do land-bases learnings, teachings and ceremonies (currently put on hold due to COVID-19).

Dr. Numer says data will be collected in non-invasive ways by the community partners (Healing Our Nations and the Friendship Centre), working with the communities to find out what they want to happen and what they want to share. The results will be given back to the community.

鈥淭he goals are so big 鈥 addressing health inequities 鈥 it鈥檚 hard to even find out where to start so we鈥檙e following the leads of the community from the ground up. When we talk about how our culture has interrupted the idea of masculinity, sexuality and health, it has to happen in a place where people are comfortable to talk.鈥

Award-winning researcher

In March of this year, Dr. Numer won the Early Career Research Excellence Award from the Faculty of Health.

鈥淚t鈥檚 pretty awesome. We do a lot of our work in silos, it鈥檚 just the nature of academia, so it鈥檚 nice to know that people see your efforts.鈥

Dr. Numer and the SHaG Lab team continue to do work on gay men鈥檚 sexual health in relation to drug use and hook up apps, undergraduate attitudes towards various sexual topics, and more.

He says as a gay man and an activist, he was drawn to this work.

鈥淚鈥檝e always been pretty involved in the community. I鈥檝e had partners who have HIV, and the significance is big. There鈥檚 a big difference between the way we think about things and the way people experience things.鈥

鈥淪ex is an emotional act for people, even when it鈥檚 hookup sex. I do a lot of broad cultural work too, to change the way we think about sex to be something not hidden, not stigmatized. It鈥檚 nice to see that my work is landing with people.鈥

To keep up to date with the SHaG Lab鈥檚 research, follow them on Twitter .