Tookes Hansel, Yao Kristiana, Chueng Teresa, Butts Stefani, Karsner Ryan, Duque Maria, Cardenas Gabriel, Feaster Daniel J, Doblecki-Lewis Susanne
1 Division of Infectious Diseases, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL, USA.
2 Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL, USA.
Int J STD AIDS. 2019 Sep;30(10):978-984. doi: 10.1177/0956462419855178. Epub 2019 Jul 8.
PrEP is a promising tool for HIV prevention, but uptake has been slow in key demographics and geographic areas including racial and ethnic minorities. Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs), serving those with heightened risk of contracting HIV, including low income and minority patients regardless of ability to pay, are potential sites for PrEP delivery. This study aims to determine availability of PrEP at FQHCs in the US. FQHCs in the 11 largest U.S. metropolitan areas were included. The south included Atlanta, Dallas, District of Columbia, Houston, and Miami. Non-south included Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, New York, Philadelphia, and San Francisco. We randomly selected 360 FQHCs for phone calls in which investigators queried the availability of PrEP for HIV prevention at each center. The study was powered to determine a 10% difference in proportion of clinics with PrEP services by region. We used a bivariate logistic regression to compare cities and regions. The percentage of FQHCs providing PrEP generally was low within this sample, with 0–28.0% offering PrEP services in the southern and 14.0–33.3% in non-southern metropolitan areas. Overall, 19.3% of clinics sampled indicated that they offered PrEP. Logistic regression did not show any difference between southern and non-southern regions (p=0.779). However, the total number of FQHCs was significantly lower in southern metropolitan areas (p=0.014). FQHCs in all metropolitan areas provided limited access to PrEP. Interventions, including technical assistance to increase PrEP availability in these settings catering to underserved populations, could be beneficial.
暴露前预防(PrEP)是一种很有前景的艾滋病毒预防工具,但在包括少数族裔在内的关键人群和地理区域,其采用率一直很低。联邦合格医疗中心(FQHCs)为感染艾滋病毒风险较高的人群提供服务,包括低收入和少数族裔患者,无论其支付能力如何,这些中心都是提供PrEP的潜在场所。本研究旨在确定美国FQHCs提供PrEP的情况。纳入了美国11个最大都市地区的FQHCs。南部地区包括亚特兰大、达拉斯、哥伦比亚特区、休斯顿和迈阿密。非南部地区包括波士顿、芝加哥、洛杉矶、纽约、费城和旧金山。我们随机选择了360家FQHCs进行电话调查,调查人员询问了每个中心用于艾滋病毒预防的PrEP的可用性。该研究旨在确定不同地区提供PrEP服务的诊所比例相差10%。我们使用二元逻辑回归来比较城市和地区。在这个样本中,提供PrEP的FQHCs的比例总体较低,南部地区提供PrEP服务的比例为0%-28.0%,非南部大都市地区为14.0%-33.3%。总体而言,抽样诊所中有19.3%表示他们提供PrEP。逻辑回归未显示南部和非南部地区之间存在任何差异(p=0.779)。然而,南部大都市地区的FQHCs总数明显较少(p=0.014)。所有大都市地区的FQHCs提供PrEP的机会有限。开展干预措施,包括提供技术援助以增加在这些服务不足人群环境中的PrEP可用性,可能会有益处。