Knight Rod, Small Will, Carson Anna, Shoveller Jean
Faculty of Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, Canada.
British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, Vancouver, Canada.
PLoS One. 2016 Jan 12;11(1):e0146513. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0146513. eCollection 2016.
HIV Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) has been found to be efficacious in preventing HIV acquisition among seronegative individuals in a variety of risk groups, including men who have sex with men and people who inject drugs. To date, however, it remains unclear how socio-cultural norms (e.g., attitudes towards HIV; social understandings regarding HIV risk practices) may influence the scalability of future PrEP interventions. The objective of this study is to assess how socio-cultural norms may influence the implementation and scalability of future HIV PrEP interventions in Vancouver, Canada.
We conducted 50 interviews with young men (ages 18-24) with a variety of HIV risk behavioural profiles (e.g., young men who inject drugs; MSM). Interviews focused on participants' experiences and perceptions with various HIV interventions and policies, including PrEP.
While awareness of PrEP was generally low, perceptions about the potential personal and public health gains associated with PrEP were interconnected with expressions of complex and sometimes conflicting social norms. Some accounts characterized PrEP as a convenient form of reliable protection against HIV, likening it to the female birth control pill. Other accounts cast PrEP as a means to facilitate 'socially unacceptable' behaviour (e.g., promiscuity). Stigmatizing rhetoric was used to position PrEP as a tool that could promote some groups' proclivities to take 'risks'.
Stigma regarding 'risky' behaviour and PrEP should not be underestimated as a serious implementation challenge. Pre-implementation strategies that concomitantly aim to improve knowledge about PrEP, while addressing associated social prejudices, may be key to effective implementation and scale-up.
已发现艾滋病毒暴露前预防(PrEP)在预防包括男男性行为者和注射毒品者在内的各种风险群体中的血清阴性个体感染艾滋病毒方面是有效的。然而,迄今为止,社会文化规范(例如对艾滋病毒的态度;对艾滋病毒风险行为的社会认知)如何影响未来PrEP干预措施的可扩展性仍不清楚。本研究的目的是评估社会文化规范如何影响加拿大温哥华未来艾滋病毒PrEP干预措施的实施和可扩展性。
我们对具有各种艾滋病毒风险行为特征(例如注射毒品的年轻男性;男男性行为者)的18至24岁年轻男性进行了50次访谈。访谈重点关注参与者对包括PrEP在内的各种艾滋病毒干预措施和政策的经历和看法。
虽然对PrEP的认识普遍较低,但对与PrEP相关的潜在个人和公共健康益处的看法与复杂且有时相互冲突的社会规范的表达相互关联。一些描述将PrEP描述为一种方便的可靠预防艾滋病毒的形式,将其比作女性避孕药。其他描述则将PrEP视为促进“社会不可接受”行为(例如滥交)的一种手段。污名化言论被用来将PrEP定位为一种可能助长某些群体“冒险”倾向的工具。
不应低估对“危险”行为和PrEP的污名化作为一个严重的实施挑战。在实施前的策略中,同时旨在提高对PrEP的认识,同时解决相关的社会偏见,可能是有效实施和扩大规模的关键。