| Literature DB >> 34034719 |
Elizabeth C Pasipanodya1, Jamila Stockman2, Thupten Phuntsog2, Sheldon Morris2, Christina Psaros3, Raphael Landovitz4, K Rivet Amico5, David J Moore2, Jill Blumenthal6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Prior to implementing a pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) demonstration study, we sought to explore cisgender women's experiences with HIV prevention, PrEP knowledge and attitudes, and anticipated barriers and facilitators for PrEP uptake and adherence in Southern California.Entities:
Keywords: Cisgender women; HIV prevention; PrEP attitudes; Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP)
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34034719 PMCID: PMC8146684 DOI: 10.1186/s12905-021-01348-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Womens Health ISSN: 1472-6874 Impact factor: 2.742
Participant demographics
| N = 22 | |
|---|---|
| Age, median (IQR) | 44 (30–53) |
| Non-Hispanic white | 7 |
| Non-Hispanic black | 6 |
| Latina | 8 |
| Other/mixed | 1 |
| Living with HIV | 4 |
| Living without HIV | 18 |
Focus group domains and emerging themes/subthemes
| Domain | Themes | Exemplar quotes |
|---|---|---|
| PrEP awareness | ||
| Suppresses HIV infection | That is a concern. Is it just keeping it in advance? … then you’re like, stop taking PrEP, and then you get, you’re like, “I have HIV?” | |
| Results in tolerance or resistance to medications | “You’re basically building an immune system to it, so these people going out here thinking, “Well, I can just take it when I plan on having sex and I’m good.” But not knowing that, “Well, I’m now building a resistance to it because I’m not taking it as prescribed.” | |
| Efficacy | “Yeah. Okay. So, say you start taking this PrEP and your partner has HIV and you don’t, and you been takin’ PrEP ‘cause you know he has HIV. Like he’s been open about it. And then you been takin’ PrEP and then suddenly you get pregnant by him, is the baby gonna have HIV or not because you was takin’ PrEP while you started…?” | |
| Accessibility | “Do you have to have a prescription or can you buy it over the counter?” | |
| Safety and side effects | “Is it safe for pregnant women to take it?” | |
| Dosing | “So, is it like birth control? You know how birth control, you have to take it at that set time.” | |
| Greater HIV education and HIV stigma reduction | “I also think it’s important that, and this is so much easier said than done, but to make it more acceptable. For example, I’m thinkin’ of Susan G. Komen. Someone who gets breast cancer is completely innocent. You, you know, and look at how not, look at all the exposure that breast cancer how has, and on the support, and millions and millions and millions of dollars that they’ve raised for breast cancer, for women. Why is it not okay for somebody to say, “I’m HIV-positive, but I’m not an alien, I’m not weird, I’m not different.” | |
| Word of mouth endorsements | “… if I was to come to you and say, as somebody that’s HIV-positive for 23 years. If they have a pill that can help the prevention of passing the virus on, as a single female, would you be interested in taking this pill?” | |
| Education in prisons and schools | …” they don’t care. Something needs to make them care. Bring it in the schools. Bring it in the middle schools. The high schools. The colleges.” | |
| Public advertisements | “…they’re gonna be advertisements and commercials. And, every time I’m watchin’, I’m watchin’ Hulu—do you know how many drug commercials I see?” | |
| Social media | “…that’s what I’m sayin’, if they just type somethin’ out and put it on Facebook, Instagram, and just share it. Whether they say somethin’ negative or positive about it, people’s still gonna talk about it and it’s gonna get out there in the world.” | |
| Combine with reproductive and other health services | “I had to go to Planned Parenthood and get my birth control. But, this wasn’t…proposed to me as an option. So, I wasn’t aware that this was out there. …I think if more people knew, they might be more interested. Also, you know, if you’re getting birth control…we should also be informed, ‘Oh, by the way…” | |
| PrEP uptake | ||
| Side effects | “Well, before they give it to you, they come with a, it comes with side effects. Every medication has side effects that’s probably bein’ passed by the FDA…. you enterin’ basically at your own risk.…” | |
| Risk compensation | But you’re gonna get a lot of people, too, that are gonna think, ‘Well, if I take this tonight, I’m good. I can go out and just get as buck wild as I want.” | |
| Diversion/misuse | “I feel like, and people are always going to abuse it, people are going to sell it, all my, you know, in college you could buy anything you want—I’m not that far removed from it. You can find anything you want.” | |
| Poor adherence | “I think a lot of people will do that. They’ll just stop taking, “I’m gonna take it every three days ‘cause it’s in my system.” | |
| No protection from other STIs | “…there’s not just that, there’s like gonorrhea, there’s other things.” | |
| Protection from HIV | “… the only reason to take PrEP is to make sure I don’t get HIV.” | |
| Autonomy | “You might trust that person so you guys stop usin’ condoms. I would still take it if I’m sexually active like that because that’s my health.” | |
| Peace of mind | “So to help your health, and my frame of mind that you’re gonna be semi-protected, that’s the situation I would use it in for myself.” | |
| More preventative choices | But it gives them like the option because I know when I was in high school they only taught abstinence, that’s it… I need to have, not everyone’s going to be on a straight and narrow path… And, everyone needs to have, you know, the option.” | |
| Facilitating intimate relationships | “Now, that opens the door for me further down the line if I choose to have a relationship, I can bring this to my partner that, “Hey, this is my situation. This is what we can do protect…” | |
| Women in serodiscordant relationships | “So because I don’t want you to catch anything, I would then ask for you to take the PrEP.” | |
| Women with multiple sex partners or in relationship with a non-monogamous partner | “I know when I was between the 18–24, that’s the most when you want to venture out, and… you want to get out of your parents’ like—not eye—but like you want to explore the world for yourself, so with that comes like risky behavior, and multiple partners, and just all different situations.” | |
| Women who use drugs or engage in sex work | there’s people that’s at high risk for AIDS, for HIV. If you’re prostitutin’, usin’ drugs, or whatever you’re doing, your lifestyle..” | |
| Women of color | Well, people of color, it’s supposed to be more for people of color | |
| Youth | “… teenagers and stuff, they’re more, is catchin’ it now and stuff, so like for them, I guess it would be, you know, something good.” | |
| Older women | You know where, I think older women, it would be awesome for, you know, for PrEP to be targeted at the older women that are not goin’ through menopause, that are not using any kind of, which is the next growing population…” | |
| Barriers and facilitators of PrEP initiation and adherence | ||
| Maintaining health | “So, with that just bein’ said, it’s like, exactly, why not do somethin’ that’s, could prevent you from layin’ in a hospital. Like I said, ‘cause if I was to take it, there will be nothing that would distract me from taking it…” | |
| Sense of empowerment in directing one’s sexual health | Like I, like at the end of the day, it’s gonna fall on me, like regardless of what the doctor says, regardless of whatever happened between me getting the pill and me taking it. Like at the end of the day, it’s my responsibility.” | |
| Support from family/friends | “If I am open, like especially with people close to me about that I’m taking it, I think that would help me…keep taking it because then you go a support system behind you.” | |
| Support from medical providers | “I think if I trust my healthcare provider, I’m more likely to be honest about what the issues are for me to not take it, or what’s getting in the way, or what’s, or maybe that I am taking it correctly.” | |
| Support from women taking PrEP | “I just need some ideas, to bounce ideas, to be comfortable to talk to somebody who takes the pill. ‘Cause, you’re not gonna have that same conversation with someone who don’t even know nothin’ about PrEP, don’t even take PrEP.” | |
| Hearing from women living with HIV | I think it would be a great idea to let them see what us, a woman that isn’t doing well, isn’t doing as well as the men definitely, overall, for them to see that there are women, that when we get it, most of us get real unhealthy real quickly.” | |
| Reminders and memory aids | “You could set your alarm on your phone, on your TV, in your car—they have everything that could literally like, “Oh, you need to take your medicine.”” | |
| Busyness | “I think there’s a much more important component, especially for woman. We usually think about everybody but ourselves, and, you know, it, and you get busy, you know, so even if you’re tryin’ to take, it’s hard for women, you know, maybe to take it on a regular, you know? Just ‘cause you get busy.” | |
| Low priority/ disinterest | “But there’s also a difference of if I’m sick and I take medicine, I’m willing to take medicine if I’m sick. If I’m not sick, I’m not as willing.” | |
| Perception of low risk for HIV | “I think one thing that you’re going to be fighting real hard is the misconception that the AIDS crisis is over. There’s a huge, huge, huge percentage of the younger population who’s sitting there going, “I don’t have to worry about AIDS. The AIDS thing’s over.” | |
| Unpleasant reminder of HIV or of risk behaviors | “Well, plus, as sexually speaking, it’s a reminder—if you’re taking this every day and you’re like, “I don’t want to get AIDS. I don’t want to get AIDS.” | |
| Poor access | “Well, that’s the biggest thing. If it’s not covered by insurance, not many people are gonna pay for it, and they’re not gonna go out of their way to pay for it and insurances aren’t gonna cover it…” | |
| HIV stigma | “No one is gonna have that in their purse. So first of all, people that knows me anyway, and if they know what it is, they’re gonna be like, “Oh, you got…Spread the rumors.” | |
| Medical mistrust | “It’s not good. If it really was good, like and that’s the truth, people would take it, like thousands… People would start takin’ it.” |