| Literature DB >> 29143163 |
Julie Franks1, Yael Hirsch-Moverman2,3, Avelino S Loquere2, K Rivet Amico4, Robert M Grant5, Bonnie J Dye6, Yan Rivera2, Robert Gamboa2, Sharon B Mannheimer2,3,7.
Abstract
The HPTN 067/Alternative Dosing to Augment Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Pill Taking (ADAPT) study evaluated daily and non-daily dosing schedules for oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) to prevent HIV. A qualitative sub-study including focus groups and in-depth interviews was conducted among men who have sex with men participating in New York City to understand their experience with PrEP and study dosing schedules. The 37 sub-study participants were 68% black, 11% white, and 8% Asian; 27% were of Hispanic/Latino ethnicity. Mean age was 34 years. Themes resulting from qualitative analysis include: PrEP is a significant advance for HIV prevention; non-daily dosing of PrEP is congruent with HIV risk; and pervasive stigma connected to HIV and risk behavior is a barrier to PrEP adherence, especially for non-daily dosing schedules. The findings underscore how PrEP intersects with other HIV prevention practices and highlight the need to understand and address multidimensional stigma related to PrEP use.Entities:
Keywords: Adherence; MSM; Pre-exposure prophylaxis; Sexual behavior; Stigma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29143163 PMCID: PMC5878834 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-017-1964-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165
Focus group guide
| Understanding of schedule |
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| 1. What is your understanding of how you were asked to take pills in this study? |
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| Schedule fit to daily life (facilitators/challenges) |
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| 2. What would you say were the main things that made this recommended schedule work well for you or fit into your life? |
| 3. What would you say were the main things that made this recommended schedule not work so well, or really fit well into your life? Were there times it was particularly hard to try to take the pills as recommended (prescribed)? |
| Feasibility/acceptability of assigned schedule |
| 4. For your recommended schedule, [ |
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| 5. How reasonable is it to ask people to follow a pill-taking schedule that tells people to [ |
| Schedule alterations |
| 6. Many people find it difficult to take pills exactly as they are recommended, for lots of reasons. Sometimes people change how they take pills to better suit their lives. Are there any times you can think of when you changed the recommended schedule in this study to better fit your life? Would you share with the group how you did this? |
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| Ideal schedule |
| 7. What would your ideal schedule for taking these pills be? What would work best for you? |
| Preferences for other schedules |
| 8. Other schedules being studied include [ |
| Perceptions of adherence support offered/provided |
| 9. At each visit that you were given study drug, a counselor asked you about your experiences with the study pills. What were those discussions like? |
| 10. How did those discussions affect your pill-taking, if at all? |
| 11. What kind of changes would you recommend for those discussions? |
| 12. Based on your experience, what would you recommend to help people who are not in a study take PrEP as their doctor recommends? |
| PrEP as part of/or in conflict with other prevention strategies |
| 13. Let’s talk about what you normally do that may protect you from getting HIV. What kinds of things do you normally do? |
| 14. When you started taking these tablets, did you notice a change in any of the other things that you normally would do to help to protect you from HIV? |
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| Risk compensation |
| 15. When you started taking these tablets, did you notice a change in your sexual behaviors? |
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| 16. Did taking the pills ever affect the way you thought about your risk of getting HIV? In what way(s)? |
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| Social motivation/study connections |
| [ |
| 17. Did anyone close to you know about your participation in this trial? |
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| 18. What kinds of things influenced your decision to tell people or not to tell people that you were in this study and/or that you were taking the study medication? |
| 19. What would you say about any support you got from people important to you, the study team members you worked with during your clinic visits, or other participants you met during visits or as a part of your involvement in the study? Did you get any support from others? What would be an example of that? |
| Recommendations |
| 20. Last question‐ Are there any observations or recommendations for the research team that you would like to offer that have not been discussed? |
In-depth interview guide
| Understanding of schedule |
| 1. What is your understanding of the schedule for pill taking that you were asked to follow? |
| Schedule fit to daily life (facilitators/challenges) |
|
|
| 2. What would you say were the main things that made this recommended schedule work well for you or fit into your life? |
| 3. What would you say were the main things that made this recommended schedule not work so well, or really fit well into your life? Were there times it was particularly hard to take the pills as recommended (prescribed)? |
| Feasibility/acceptability of assigned schedule |
| 4. For your recommended pill-taking schedule, what would you say about how acceptable it would be to people in general? Who do you think it would be good for? Who do you think it would |
| 5. How reasonable is it to ask people to follow a schedule that tells people to take pills on the schedule that you had |
| Schedule alterations |
| 6. Many people find it difficult to take pills exactly as they are recommended for lots of reasons. Sometimes people change how they take pills to better suit their lives. Are there any times you can think of where you changed the schedule to better fit your life? |
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| Ideal schedule |
| 7. What would your ideal schedule for taking these pills be for you? |
| Preferences for other schedules |
| 8. Other schedules being studied include Daily (one tablet each day); Twice Weekly‐Plus (take a tablet on two separate days of the week plus a tablet after each time you have sex); Before and After sex (take one tablet a day or so before sex and shortly after sex). If all these schedules for pill-taking worked as well as the others to prevent HIV infection, which of these would you choose? |
| Perceptions of adherence support offered/provided |
| 9. Each visit that you were dispensed study drug, a counselor asked you about your experiences with the study tablets. What were those discussions like for you? |
| 10. How did those discussions affect your pill-taking, if at all? |
| 11. Would you recommend changes to those discussions? |
| 12. Based on your experience, what would you recommend to help people who are not in a study take PrEP as it is recommended to them? |
| PrEP as part of/or in conflict with other prevention strategies |
| 13. Let’s talk about what you normally do that can protect you from getting HIV. What kinds of things do you normally do (like condom use, talking about HIV status, getting HIV testing, limiting number of partners, and so on)? |
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| Risk compensation |
| 14. When you started taking these tablets, did you notice a change in your sexual behaviors? |
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| 15. Did taking the pills ever affect the way you thought about your risk of getting HIV? In what way(s)? |
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| Social motivation/study connections |
| [ |
| 16. Did anyone close to you know about your participation in this trial? What kinds of things influenced your decision to tell people or not to tell people that you were in this study and/or that you were taking the study medication? |
| 17. What would you say about the kind of support you got from people important to you, the study team members you worked with during your clinic visits, or other participants you met during visits or as a part of your involvement in the study? |
| 18. Did you get any support from others? Can you describe that support to me? |
| Recommendations |
| 19. Last question‐ Are there any observations or recommendations for the research team that you would like to offer that have not been discussed? |
Qualitative sub-study participant demographics
| FG (n = 31) | IDI (n = 6) | Total (n = 37) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean age | 34 | 36 | 34 |
| Gender identity | |||
| MSM | 31 (100%) | 5 (83%) | 36 (97%) |
| Gender queer | 0 (0%) | 1 (17%) | 1 (3%) |
| Race | |||
| Black | 21 (68%) | 4 (67%) | 25 (68%) |
| White | 3 (10%) | 1 (17%) | 4 (11%) |
| Asian | 3 (10%) | 0% | 3 (8%) |
| Othera | 4 (13%) | 1 (17%) | 5 (14%) |
| Hispanic ethnicity | 9 (29%) | 1 (17%) | 10 (27%) |
| Unemployed | 20 (65%) | 5 (83%) | 25 (68%) |
| Educational level | |||
| Less than high school | 7 (23%) | 1 (17%) | 8 (22%) |
| High school | 9 (29%) | 3 (50%) | 12 (32%) |
| Technical training | 2 (6%) | 2 (33%) | 4 (11%) |
| Some college | 6 (19%) | 0% | 6 (16%) |
| College | 7 (23%) | 0% | 7 (19%) |
aIncludes European (2), not defined (2), and Native American (1)