1 Department of Psychology, George Washington University, Washington, District of Columbia.
2 The Fenway Institute, Fenway Health, Boston, Massachusetts.
AIDS Patient Care STDS. 2019 Feb;33(2):79-88. doi: 10.1089/apc.2018.0166.
Efforts to identify and address social inequities in HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) access are urgently needed. We investigated early-adopting PrEP prescribers' beliefs about how stigma contributes to PrEP access disparities in health care and explored potential intervention strategies within the context of PrEP service delivery. US-based PrEP prescribers were recruited through professional networks and participant referrals. Qualitative interviews were conducted, transcribed, and thematically analyzed. Participants (n = 18) were primarily male (72%); white (39%) or Asian (33%); and heterosexual (56%). Most practiced in the Northeastern (67%) or Southern (22%) United States; were physicians (94%); and specialized in HIV/infectious disease (89%). Participants described multiple forms of structural and interpersonal stigma impeding PrEP access. The requirement that PrEP be prescribed was a perceived deterrent for populations with medical mistrust and/or low health literacy. Practice norms such as discussing PrEP only in response to patient requests were seen as favoring more privileged groups. When probed about personally held biases, age-related stereotypes were the most readily acknowledged, including assumptions about older adults being sexually inactive and uncomfortable discussing sex. Participants criticized providers who chose not to prescribe PrEP within their clinical practice, particularly those whose decision reflected personal values related to condomless sex or discomfort communicating about sex with their patients. Suggested solutions included standardizing PrEP service delivery across patients and increasing cultural competence training. These early insights from a select sample of early-adopting providers illuminate mechanisms through which stigma could compromise PrEP access for key populations and corresponding points of intervention within the health care system.
亟须努力识别和解决艾滋病毒暴露前预防 (PrEP) 获得方面的社会不平等问题。我们调查了早期采用 PrEP 的处方医生对污名如何导致医疗保健中 PrEP 获得机会不平等的看法,并探讨了在 PrEP 服务提供背景下的潜在干预策略。通过专业网络和参与者推荐,在美国招募了 PrEP 处方医生。进行了定性访谈、转录和主题分析。参与者(n=18)主要是男性(72%);白人(39%)或亚洲人(33%);异性恋(56%)。大多数人在美国东北部(67%)或南部(22%)行医;是医生(94%);并专门从事 HIV/传染病学(89%)。参与者描述了多种形式的结构和人际污名阻碍了 PrEP 的获得。需要开处方才能获得 PrEP,这对有医疗不信任和/或低健康素养的人群来说是一个障碍。讨论 PrEP 仅作为回应患者请求的做法规范被视为有利于更有特权的群体。当被问及个人偏见时,年龄相关的刻板印象是最容易被承认的,包括对老年人没有性行为和对性讨论感到不舒服的假设。参与者批评那些在临床实践中选择不开具 PrEP 的提供者,尤其是那些认为自己的决定与无保护性行为或与患者沟通性问题不舒服有关的个人价值观的提供者。建议的解决方案包括在患者之间标准化 PrEP 服务交付,并增加文化能力培训。这些来自早期采用者的精选样本的早期见解阐明了污名可能损害关键人群获得 PrEP 的机制,以及医疗保健系统中的相应干预点。