| Individual and Relationships Domains:Provider Level |
Knowledge
Lack of training in PrEP provisionDisagreement/uncertainty about appropriate PrEP patientsConcerns/uncertainty about insurance coverage for PrEP
Attitudes and beliefs
Biases against patients’ race and sexual behaviorsConcerns about PrEP efficacy, toxicity, and resistanceConcerns about patients’ disinhibition and risk compensation leading to lack of adherence/compliance |
Knowledge
Improved education of potential PrEP providersDevelopment of trainings and interventions to assist providers in identifying appropriate PrEP candidates
Attitudes and beliefs
Development and delivery of trainings to increase provider “cultural competency,” including trans- and gender-affirming careInterventions to identify and disrupt provider-held stereotypes about potential PrEP users |
| Individual and Relationships Domains:Patient Level |
Knowledge
Low awareness of PrEP and low demand for PrEP
Attitudes and beliefs
Side effects; effectiveness; toxicities; interaction with feminizing hormonesManaging multiple health concerns and PrEP side effectsPrioritization of care for current conditions (e.g., pain or stress) above HIV preventionPrioritization of gender-affirming feminizing hormone therapyDistrust of medical system: structural racism, transphobia, and negative experiencesCompeting priorities during periods of substance useDiminished concern for prevention with intimate partnersConcerns about HIV-reporting systems, including potential insurance implications of a positive HIV resultUnwillingness to discuss PrEP with primary care providers |
Knowledge
Increased education and counseling to increase PrEP knowledge
Attitudes and beliefs
Development of supportive behavioral interventions (e.g., risk-reduction, medication-adherence, and retention counseling)Assistance in navigating the healthcare system, including accessing health insurance and co-pay assistanceReferrals of patients with mental-health, substance-use, or “social” issues (e.g., housing insecurity) to social workers or community resourcesSide-effect monitoring |
| Community and PolicyDomains:Healthcare-System Level |
Communication and awareness
Lack of effective messaging about PrEPLack of communication between healthcare providers and community-based organizations
Funding
Limited health budgets to sustain PrEP programsLack of insurance coverage and financial-assistance programs
Capacity & access
Lack of focus on “nonprescribing service providers”Purview paradox: neither HIV specialists nor PCPs consider PrEP implementation within their clinical domainLack of training, referral systems, or established reimbursement levels for care and drugsLegal constraints to providing PrEP for youth, including mandates to involve parental figures in working with minorsLack of access to care: inadequate transportation; inflexible work schedules; inconvenient locations dispensing PrEPTime constraints on medical appointmentsLack of medical insurance and limited insurance networksLack of patient confidence and perseverance to access care
Pharmaceutical barriers
Particular constraints of Truvada™ as PrEP (e.g., daily dosing schedule, side effects)
Population-specific barriers and stigma
Lack of gender-affirming healthcare for transgender womenLack of trans-inclusive marketing of PrEPLow prioritization of PrEP for people who inject drugsStigma associated with PrEP use and accessing HIV servicesThe intersection of HIV-stigma with transphobia and homophobia |
Communication and awareness
Community-engagement and community-mobilization strategiesSystems to improve interagency/interprofessional collaboration
Funding
General advocacy for expanded health insuranceFunding for medication costs, adherence counseling/monitoring, and support services; referral to medication-assistance programs
Capacity and access
Expanded PrEP-delivery systems, staff, time, space, expertiseEngagement of generalist PCPs in PrEP provision for scale-up (addressing the purview paradox)Expanded/diversified settings providing PrEP (e.g., private practices, mental-health clinics, ERs) and integration of PrEP into primary careExpanded education, screening, referrals to PrEP servicesImproved methods to identify appropriate PrEP candidatesSpecific guidelines from “normative bodies” (e.g., CDC, APA)Partnerships between medical and social-service providersDevelopment of systems to monitor and evaluate PrEP useCross-training of staff (e.g., educators, pharmacists, nurses)Improvements in pharmacists’ PrEP education
Pharmaceutical barriers
Advancing new PrEP technologies: innovative pharmacologic chemoprophylactic approaches (e.g., on-demand PrEP dosing, injectable, microbicides, rings, films)Pharmacokinetic studies of potential drug–drug interactions, particularly in oral PrEP medications and feminizing hormones
Population-specific barriers and stigma
Disaggregating transgender women from MSM in research and clinical practice and developing trans-inclusive research strategiesImproving access to trans-competent PrEP providersIntegrating PrEP care with contraceptive servicesFocusing resources on vulnerable communitiesExpanded “youth-friendly” health services, including augmented PrEP visit schedules, adherence clubs and social-support groups |