| Literature DB >> 28971705 |
Meredith E Clement1,2, Jessica Seidelman1, Jiewei Wu3, Kareem Alexis4, Kara McGee1, N Lance Okeke1, Gregory Samsa3, Mehri McKellar1.
Abstract
Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is an effective HIV prevention method, but many primary care physicians (PCPs) have not incorporated PrEP into practice. While PrEP may be a key strategy to reducing high HIV transmission rates in the southern US, knowledge about PrEP prescribing patterns among PCPs in this region is lacking. An online survey was sent to a large network of PCPs at an academic medical center in North Carolina in October 2015. The survey was repeated in September 2016, after an educational intervention that included on-site trainings at 14 PCP offices. Chi-square tests were used to compare PrEP prescribing patterns among providers. The initial survey was sent to 389 PCPs, with 115 (30%) responding. Of these, 78% reported seeing men who have sex with men (MSM). Only 17% had prescribed PrEP. The most frequently identified barrier was lack of knowledge (60%). When the survey was repeated after the educational initiative, 79 PCPs (20%) responded. Of these, 90% reported seeing MSM, and 35% had prescribed PrEP. PCPs who had attended a training were more likely to have prescribed PrEP (OR 4.84, CI 1.77-13.21). In conclusion, PrEP prescribing among PCPs in the southern US is low. A survey among PCPs identified lack of knowledge as a barrier to prescribing, motivating an institutional-wide educational campaign in response. Further efforts are needed to continue to raise awareness and educate PCPs in the South about PrEP.Entities:
Keywords: PCPs; PrEP; Pre-exposure prophylaxis; primary care providers; southern United States
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28971705 PMCID: PMC6612371 DOI: 10.1080/09540121.2017.1384534
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Care ISSN: 0954-0121