Department of Medicine, University Teaching Hospital of Kigali, Kigali, Rwanda.
Yale AIDS Program, Section of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Nov 26;13(11):e0207650. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0207650. eCollection 2018.
There are too many new HIV infections globally with 1.8 million persons infected in 2016 alone. Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) holds potential to decrease new infections and is synergistic with efforts currently in place to achieve an end to the AIDS epidemic in Sub-Saharan African, but uptake is limited. Given its novelty, assessing the beliefs and attitudes of healthcare professionals and members of the community towards HIV transmission and PrEP will be helpful to inform implementation efforts. Study was a random survey of 201 community members and 51 healthcare providers, carried out at multiple community sites in Huye district, Southern Province, Rwanda and at Kigali University Teaching Hospital (KUTH). The study findings are that there are still misconceptions about HIV in the community with some respondents believing that HIV is due to punishment from God (5.4%), poverty (3.0%), smoking cigarettes (1.0%), drinking alcohol (2.0%), punishment from ancestors (1.0%) and witchcraft (1.5%), and that its transmission is by mosquito bites (10.9%), sharing food or drinks with a HIV infected person (6.5%) or as a result of carelessness (47.8%). More than 50% of respondents from both groups had insufficient knowledge regarding PrEP, but expressed some interest in PrEP (82.6% of the respondents from the community and 86.5% of the health workers). However, some healthcare workers felt that promotion of safe sex practices (74.5%), HIV testing and treating HIV infected patients (60.8%) would work better than PrEP to decrease new HIV infections. Barriers to PrEP implementation included perceived stigma, delayed access to prevention services at the health facilities while personal-level concerns included lack of family support, reluctance to take a medication daily and fear of being perceived as having HIV. This study showed that health care workers and community members are willing to utilize PrEP in Rwanda, but many challenges exist including limited knowledge about PrEP, stigma, provider and system level service delivery barriers at health facilities among others. More studies are needed to assess ways of addressing and /or eliminating these barriers.
全球范围内新感染 HIV 的人数过多,仅 2016 年就有 180 万人感染。暴露前预防(PrEP)有可能减少新的感染,并且与目前在撒哈拉以南非洲实现艾滋病疫情终结的努力具有协同作用,但使用率有限。鉴于其新颖性,评估医疗保健专业人员和社区成员对 HIV 传播和 PrEP 的信念和态度,将有助于为实施工作提供信息。该研究是在卢旺达南部省胡耶地区的多个社区地点以及基加利大学教学医院(KUTH)对 201 名社区成员和 51 名医疗保健提供者进行的随机调查。研究结果表明,社区中仍然存在关于 HIV 的误解,一些受访者认为 HIV 是由于上帝的惩罚(5.4%)、贫穷(3.0%)、吸烟(1.0%)、饮酒(2.0%)、祖先的惩罚(1.0%)和巫术(1.5%),其传播途径是蚊虫叮咬(10.9%)、与 HIV 感染者共享食物或饮料(6.5%)或因粗心大意(47.8%)。来自两个群体的超过 50%的受访者对 PrEP 了解不足,但对 PrEP 表示出一定的兴趣(社区受访者的 82.6%和卫生工作者的 86.5%)。然而,一些卫生保健工作者认为,促进安全性行为(74.5%)、HIV 检测和治疗 HIV 感染者(60.8%)比 PrEP 更能减少新的 HIV 感染。PrEP 实施的障碍包括感知到的耻辱感、在卫生机构中延迟获得预防服务,而个人层面的担忧包括缺乏家庭支持、不愿意每天服用药物以及害怕被视为感染了 HIV。这项研究表明,卢旺达的卫生保健工作者和社区成员愿意使用 PrEP,但存在许多挑战,包括对 PrEP 的了解有限、耻辱感、提供者和系统层面在卫生机构的服务提供障碍等。需要进一步研究来评估解决和/或消除这些障碍的方法。