Garfinkel Danielle B, Alexander Kamila A, McDonald-Mosley Reagan, Willie Tiara C, Decker Michele R
a Department of Population, Family, and Reproductive Health , Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health , Baltimore , MD , USA.
b Department of Community - Public Health , Johns Hopkins School of Nursing , Baltimore , MD , USA.
AIDS Care. 2017 Jun;29(6):751-758. doi: 10.1080/09540121.2016.1234679. Epub 2016 Sep 29.
HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) presents new opportunities for HIV prevention. While women comprise approximately 20% of new HIV infections in the US, significant questions remain about how to most effectively facilitate PrEP uptake for this population. Family planning clinics are a dominant source of health care for young women and support an estimated 4.5 million women annually. We explore characteristics associated with HIV risk perception and PrEP acceptability among young adult women seeking reproductive health services in a high-prevalence setting. A cross-sectional, clinic-based survey was conducted with women ages 18-35 (n = 146) seeking health care at two family planning clinics in the greater Baltimore, Maryland area, from January to April 2014. An estimated 22% of women reported being worried about HIV risk, and 60% reported they would consider taking a pill daily to prevent HIV. In adjusted models, HIV-related worry was associated with having no college education, being single or dating more than one person, practicing consistent condom use during vaginal sex, and having ever traded sex. PrEP acceptability was significantly associated with being Black (71% vs. 49%, AOR 2.23, CI: 1.89-2.64) and having ever traded sex (83% vs. 58%, AOR 4.94, CI: 2.00-12.22). For women with a history of intimate partner violence (IPV), PrEP acceptability was significantly lower (57% vs. 62%, AOR .71, CI: .59-.85) relative to their non-abused counterparts. Results suggest that family planning clinics may be a natural setting for PrEP discussion and roll-out. They should be considered in the context of integrating HIV prevention with reproductive health services. Women with a trauma history may need additional support for implementing HIV prevention in the form of PrEP.
艾滋病毒暴露前预防(PrEP)为预防艾滋病毒带来了新机遇。在美国,女性约占新增艾滋病毒感染病例的20%,但对于如何最有效地促使这一人群采用PrEP,仍存在重大问题。计划生育诊所是年轻女性医疗保健的主要来源,每年为约450万女性提供服务。我们在一个高流行地区,对寻求生殖健康服务的年轻成年女性中与艾滋病毒风险认知和PrEP可接受性相关的特征进行了探究。2014年1月至4月,在马里兰州巴尔的摩市较大区域的两家计划生育诊所,对18至35岁(n = 146)寻求医疗保健的女性开展了一项基于诊所的横断面调查。估计有22%的女性表示担心感染艾滋病毒风险,60%的女性称会考虑每日服药预防艾滋病毒。在调整模型中,与艾滋病毒相关的担忧与未接受过大学教育、单身或与多人约会、在阴道性行为中始终使用避孕套以及有过性交易有关。PrEP可接受性与黑人身份(71%对49%,调整后比值比2.23,置信区间:1.89 -