| Literature DB >> 27964776 |
Rena C Patel1, Gaelen Stanford-Moore2, Josephine Odoyo3, Maria Pyra4, Imeldah Wakhungu3, Keerthana Anand5, Elizabeth A Bukusi6, Jared M Baeten7, Joelle M Brown8.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Since 2015, the World Health Organization recommends pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for all persons at substantial risk for HIV, including HIV-uninfected partners in serodiscordant relationships in resource-limited settings. As PrEP moves from clinical trials to real-world use, understanding facilitators of and barriers to PrEP initiation and adherence is critical to successful PrEP implementation and rollout.Entities:
Keywords: HIV serodiscordant couples; Kenya; barriers; facilitators; heterosexual; pre-exposure prophylaxis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27964776 PMCID: PMC5155127 DOI: 10.7448/IAS.19.1.21134
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int AIDS Soc ISSN: 1758-2652 Impact factor: 5.396
Baseline characteristics of participants
| Variable | HIV-uninfected and eligible for PrEP ( |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | 34 (28–38) |
| Gender | |
| Female | 7 (23%) |
| Male | 23 (77%) |
| Married | 29 (97%) |
| Number of living children | 3 (0–5) |
| Number of living children with study partner | 0 (0–2) |
| Ethnicity | |
| Luo | 26 (87%) |
| Luhya | 3 (10%) |
| Kalenjin | 1 (3.3%) |
| Years of schooling completed | 8 (7–12) |
| Monthly income for participant | 29 USD |
| Number of years cohabitating with study partner | 2 (0.42–7) |
| Number of months HIV serodiscordant status known | 1 (1–1, range 1–72) |
| Number of months since first positive HIV test for study partner | 9.5 (6.4–12.8) |
| Initiated PrEP during study | 19 (63%) |
| Study partner on ART | 21 (70%) |
N (%) for categorical variables; Median (IQR) for continuous variables;
conversion rate of 1KSh=0.0098 USD used.
PrEP, pre-exposure prophylaxis.
Factors facilitating initiation of PrEP
| PrEP reduces HIV transmission | “It gives one that peace of mind when he/she wants to get intimate and knows that he/she is protected. The PrEP is a more sure way of protection because the condoms sometimes burst and are not that effective.” (HIV-uninfected female, 36 years, initiated PrEP, partner on ART) |
| PrEP reduces stress in and preserves relationships | “When I was being counseled, I was told that this was not the end of life because we could continue staying together in our marriage without any problems. Many people are living in HIV serodiscordant marriages and we are not the first to be affected, hence I felt relieved in my heart… I like my life and given that these drugs (PrEP) could help me prevent myself from being HIV-infected, regardless of staying with my wife, motivated me to take these drugs (PrEP).” (HIV-uninfected male, 36 years, initiated PrEP, partner on ART) |
| PrEP use for safer reproduction | “You may be using the condoms for protection purposes but when it comes to desire for conception, the condoms are not effective. Therefore, if you are taking PrEP you may not have any worries when having unprotected sex because you still remain protected.” (HIV-uninfected male, 44 years, initiated PrEP, partner on ART) |
| PrEP use can facilitate ART initiation | “They decline to take the drugs (ARVs for PrEP or ART) because they are in denial. For instance, in my case, we went testing as a couple and, you know, that my partner would have found it hard to start taking the drug (ART). Since I accepted to start taking the (PrEP) drugs, she also decided to take the (ART) drugs … We don't have any difficulty now, but we are still surprised with the HIV (serodiscordant) results. I was not sure whether she had already known her HIV status before…” (HIV-uninfected male, 31 years, initiated PrEP, partner on ART) |
| Additional information on PrEP | “I was motivated [to start PrEP] by the fact that it was printed in the newspaper sometime back, hence, I believed that it was something real and could be effective.” (HIV-uninfected male, 36 years, initiated PrEP, partner on ART) |
PrEP, pre-exposure prophylaxis; ART, antiretroviral therapy.
Barriers to initiating and adhering to PrEP
| Side effects of PrEP | “Some people say that when you start taking the drugs your body starts itching and you develop rashes. You also tend to have constant fevers. In fact, they are so many [side effects] and everyone has different reactions to the drugs.” (HIV-uninfected male, 43 years, declined PrEP, partner declined ART) | |
| “I can say it was the burden of taking many pills. I was on some drugs for a previous health condition I had and didn't want to combine these two medications.” (HIV-uninfected male, 36 years, declined PrEP, partner on ART) | ||
| Relative effectiveness of PrEP alongside other prevention tools | “I also did not see the sense in using both condoms and PrEP because I had always used the condoms alone yet I have never been infected. If it were that the pills are very effective and does not require me to use the condoms as well, I would have accepted. Using both methods is a challenge for me.” (HIV-uninfected female, 45 years, declined PrEP, partner on ART) | |
| Stigma and disclosure issues | General disclosure | “Whenever a patient goes to certain sections (of a health facility) like this (one), they will have certain perceptions about you irrespective of your status. They know exactly where certain drugs are provided and the department certain types of ailments are treated or managed.” (HIV-uninfected male, 41 years, declined PrEP, partner declined ART) |
| “Of course if people get to know that I am using PrEP, then it follows that they get to know my wife's status. People will talk ill about me publicly. They will say that I have been given drugs to protect myself from HIV because my wife is HIV positive.” (HIV-uninfected male, 24 years, initiated PrEP, partner declined ART) | ||
| Disclosure of PrEP use in a relationship | “I had accepted that I should always be tested and if found to be HIV infected, then I would simply start to take my medication without any problem. But now that I am not sick, I can't take the drugs because my other two wives will ask me why I am taking such drugs yet they are not given (them). It will be as if I am lying to them that I am not sick and I can't explain anything to them.” (HIV-uninfected male, 43 years, declined PrEP, partner declined ART) | |
| “This is my first wife and we first got tested together and it came out that she was HIV-positive but I was not. I was therefore given PrEP but when my second wife saw these drugs she was totally convinced that I was also positive and she started telling other people that both my first wife and I were positive. This led to separation and even now as we speak she is not at home… The fact that I separated from my second wife because she was suspecting that I was HIV-positive, and she went around spreading rumors that I was infected as I was on PrEP, I consider this the worst experience.” (HIV-uninfected male, 37 years, initiated PrEP, partner on ART) | ||
| “My first reason [for declining PrEP] is that I fear taking drugs. Secondly, the other partner I am with doesn't know that I come to this facility, and in case I start taking this drug (PrEP) every day and when I am with her, she will ask me what my problem is…” (HIV-uninfected male, 24 years, declined PrEP, partner declined ART) | ||
| “… I have a (n extramarital) partner whose status I didn't know, so we decided to go for the test, and unfortunately, the result was positive on her side and negative on my side… There was a day that someone stabbed me with a knife late in the night and I went to the hospital for treatment but I had already been put on Truvada. So when I went back to the house, I explained to my wife that the drugs in the bottle were for treating the wounds but didn't tell her directly… She asked me why I was still taking the drugs (PrEP) even after the wound had healed, this raised her curiosity and she wanted to know what was happening… She knows the normal drugs like septrine, amoxyl, and flagyl, so she realized that these other ones (PrEP) were different.” (HIV-uninfected male, 33 years, stopped PrEP early, partner on ART) | ||
| “If I go to take drugs (ARVs), then the other person will know and I don't want him to know. OK, just like family planning, there are those who are aware of pills, but because they are taken every day and every day they will be with their husband, they try looking for a method that will be secretive, such as coil or injection… But you find that ARVs have no such alternatives, you must take pills every day.” (HIV-infected female, 45 years, declined ART, partner declined PrEP) | ||
| PrEP recommendation masking HIV diagnosis | “Some of them may also think that it is a trick played on them. They may think that they are actually HIV-positive but the doctor does not want to disclose that to them… They may be thinking that it is just a trick not knowing that this (PrEP) is real protection.” (HIV-uninfected male, 44 years, initiated PrEP, partner on ART) | |
| Not concerned with stigma | “What matters to me is that I personally know my status and whatever people think about me will not affect me in any way. Similarly, an individual who has accepted his/her status will not be affected by what other people say about him/her.” (HIV-uninfected male, 41 years, declined PrEP, partner declined ART) | |
| “Since most people do not know PrEP, they will think that the PrEP is ARVs. The drug known by most people is ARVs. At times, some people always wonder why I am always given so many ARVs… I usually do not hide my drugs because I do not have any fear.” (HIV-uninfected male, 24 years, initiated PrEP, partner on ART) | ||
| Perception of promiscuity, commercial sex, or increasing risky behaviour | “I have a friend who is HIV-uninfected and the wife is HIV-infected…. He normally takes PrEP when going to have sex with an unknown partner at the town such that when he comes to the clinic for regular check-up he continues to test HIV negative…. He always asks me why I do not take this drug and I keep telling him that the drug is meant for those who are immoral like him. I can't take it because I am not a prostitute.” (HIV-uninfected male, 43 years, declined PrEP, partner declined ART) | |
| Adherence and logistics of PrEP use | “One major disadvantage of PrEP is that the pills are taken on a daily basis, which is a burden to most people, especially, when you start using it. However, with time people adapt to taking the pills and it becomes a routine that one cannot forget.” (HIV-uninfected male, 24 years, initiated PrEP, partner declined ART) | |
| “Taking the drugs when in reality you are not sick feels like torture… The worst (disadvantage of PrEP) is taking the drug when you are not sick.” (HIV-uninfected female, 36 years, initiated PrEP, partner on ART) | ||
| “The space I am talking about is in relation to my work place because I am a person who moves to places. For instance, I work four days in Kisumu and two days in Western… at the same time I cannot keep travelling with these drugs. So once I settle in one place then it can be easy for me to start taking the drugs.” (HIV-uninfected male, 24 years, declined PrEP, partner declined ART) | ||
| “What I know is that when there is something beneficial to life, people can walk miles regardless of how long they take to get to the site. Therefore, nobody should claim that transport is an issue unless s/he is not serious.” (HIV-uninfected male, 36 years, initiated PrEP, partner on ART) | ||
| Experimental use of PrEP and racism | “I have heard people say that these drugs have not yet been approved. They are of the opinion that those who have already subscribed to the PrEP medication are just test objects, ‘guinea pigs’, being used to test the effectiveness of these drugs. To them these drugs are but preliminary tests done by the whites to determine the effectiveness of these drugs, using fellow humans as test objects.” (HIV-infected female, 22 years, initiated ART, partner declined PrEP) | |
PrEP, pre-exposure prophylaxis; ART, antiretroviral therapy; ARVs, antiretrovirals.