| Literature DB >> 20809218 |
Sarit A Golub1, Don Operario, Pamina M Gorbach.
Abstract
Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) has the potential to become a powerful biomedical approach to HIV prevention; however, its success depends on behavioral and social factors that may determine its appropriate use. This article is designed to facilitate interdisciplinary empirical analogies relevant to PrEP implementation, reviewing behavioral and social science findings that may provide lessons critical to the success of PrEP as a biomedical-behavioral prevention strategy. As we prepare for the dissemination of new biomedical approaches to HIV prevention, integrating the state of the science across disciplines may result in innovative strategies for implementation that can enhance their success.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20809218 PMCID: PMC2938422 DOI: 10.1007/s11904-010-0057-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr HIV/AIDS Rep ISSN: 1548-3568 Impact factor: 5.071
Empirical analogies to guide PrEP research and practice
| Concept/topic | Discipline | PrEP relevance | Further reading |
|---|---|---|---|
| A. Adoption | |||
| Risk communication | Decision-sciences; Risk analysis | PrEP adoption necessitates complex communication with patients regarding PrEP efficacy and its implications for relative risk reduction | Visschers et al. [ |
| Health numeracy | Medical decision-making; health communication | Some PrEP adopters may have limited ability to understand and apply numerical information, impacting both adoption and adherence to PrEP | Reyna et al. [ |
| Heuristic vs systematic processing | Neuro-economics | Decision-making around PrEP adoption and sustained adherence will be impacted by the synergistic interaction of both deliberative and associative or affective factors; adequate support of patients must consider the influence of both types of processes | Sanfey and Chang [ |
| Framing effects | Health psychology; health communication | Development of social marketing campaigns for PrEP must consider the influence of the framing of information about a new technology on perceptions of personal risk and patient decision-making | Edwards et al. [ |
| Stigma | Sociology; public health | HIV stigma is likely to be a significant barrier to PrEP adoption and adherence | Mahajan et al. [ |
| B. Adherence | |||
| Latent tuberculosis infection | Infectious disease | Prophylactic treatment taken daily; potential for side effects; difficult for patients to make the connection between treatment and risk reduction | Hirsch-Moverman et al. [ |
| Oral contraceptive pills (OCP) | Reproductive health | Pills taken daily to prevent sexual risk; similar challenges regarding sustained condom use; similar disconnect between pill-taking and the sexual act | Rosenberg et al. [ |
| HIV ART | Public health/HIV | Lessons learned from use of similar medications in similar populations can inform PrEP adherence interventions | Stirratt and Gordon [ |
| Other biomedical approaches to HIV prevention | Public health/HIV | Experience with strategies such as microbicides, male circumcision, STD treatment can inform PrEP adherence and risk reduction | Padian et al. [ |
| Theories of health behavior | Behavioral sciences | Successes and failures in the application of existing behavioral theories to adherence interventions can inform selection of theoretical models for PrEP intervention development | Munro et al. [ |
| C. Sustained risk reduction | |||
| HIV prevention interventions | Public health/HIV | Lessons learned from past experience in the development of targeted prevention interventions can be adapted for the specific context of PrEP | Rotheram-Borus et al. [ |
| Sexual risk-taking and HAART | Public health; health psychology | Understanding the impact of beliefs around viral suppression on condom use and the relationship between antiretroviral adherence and sexual risk can inform prevention messages targeting PrEP users, especially those in serodiscordant relationships | Crepaz et al. [ |
| Kalichman et al. [ | |||
| Risk compensation | Health psychology | Provides a framework for predicting the potential impact of PrEP adoption on sexual risk practices in different populations | Eaton and Kalichman [ |
| Fuzzy Trace Theory (FTT) | Behavioral economics; decision research | Sustained risk reduction on PrEP requires ongoing risk assessment and its application to decision-making; FTT explains how individuals use both “gist” and “verbatim” information to inform risk perception and decision-making | Reyna [ |
| Emotional systems in decision-making | Neuro-economics | Managing conflicting emotions and affective cues will be critical to sustained sexual risk reduction on PrEP | Gutnik et al. [ |
| Identity | Social psychology; sociology | PrEP represents a unique opportunity to activate an HIV prevention role-identity to promote behavioral synergy; presenting PrEP adoption as part of a “prevention activist” identity may facilitate adherence and sustained risk reduction | Hagger et al. [ |
HAART highly active antiretroviral therapy; PrEP pre-exposure prophylaxis