University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Wits Reproductive Health & HIV Institute (Wits RHI), Johannesburg, South Africa.
J Int AIDS Soc. 2020 Mar;23(3):e25463. doi: 10.1002/jia2.25463.
Stigma and disclosure concerns have been key barriers to oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) adherence for African adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) in efficacy trials. We aimed to understand the impact of these factors among African AGYW in an open-label PrEP study.
HPTN 082 was an open-label PrEP study among AGYW (ages 16 to 24) in Harare, Zimbabwe, and Cape Town and Johannesburg, South Africa from 2016 to 2018. Women starting PrEP were randomized to standard adherence support (counselling, two-way SMS, monthly adherence clubs) or standard support plus drug-level feedback. Serial in-depth interviews were conducted among 67 AGYW after 13-week and 26-week study visits to explore experiences of stigma, disclosure and PrEP adherence. We analysed data by coding transcripts and memo-writing and diagramming to summarize themes.
AGYW described stigma related to sexual activity (e.g. "people say I'm a prostitute") and being perceived to be living with HIV because of taking antiretrovirals (e.g. "my husband's friends say I'm HIV infected"). Participants who anticipated stigma were reluctant to disclose PrEP use and reported adherence challenges. Disclosure also resulted in stigmatizing experiences. Across all sites, negative descriptions of stigma and disclosure challenges were more common in the first interview. In the second interview, participants often described disclosure as an "empowering" way to combat community-level PrEP stigma; many said that they proactively discussed PrEP in their communities (e.g. became a "community PrEP ambassador"), which improved their ability to take PrEP and encourage others to use PrEP. These empowering disclosure experiences were facilitated by ongoing HPTN 082 study activities (e.g. counselling sessions, adherence clubs) in which they could discuss PrEP-related stigma, disclosure and PrEP adherence issues.
Stigma and disclosure challenges were initial concerns for African AGYW newly initiating PrEP but many were empowered to disclose PrEP use over their first six months of PrEP use, which helped them cope with stigma and feel more able to take PrEP regularly. PrEP programmes can foster disclosure through community and clinic-based discussion, adherence clubs and activities normalizing sexual behaviour and PrEP use, which can reduce stigma and improve PrEP adherence and thus effectiveness.
在疗效试验中,污名化和披露问题一直是阻碍非洲青少年女孩和年轻女性(AGYW)接受口服暴露前预防(PrEP)的主要障碍。我们旨在了解这些因素对在开放标签 PrEP 研究中的非洲 AGYW 的影响。
HPTN 082 是一项在津巴布韦哈拉雷和南非开普敦和约翰内斯堡的 16 至 24 岁 AGYW 中进行的开放标签 PrEP 研究,时间为 2016 年至 2018 年。开始接受 PrEP 的女性被随机分配到标准依从性支持(咨询、双向短信、每月依从俱乐部)或标准支持加药物水平反馈。在第 13 周和 26 周的研究访问后,对 67 名 AGYW 进行了一系列深入访谈,以探讨污名化、披露和 PrEP 依从性的经验。我们通过对转录本进行编码和备忘录写作以及图表制作来分析数据,以总结主题。
AGYW 描述了与性行为相关的污名化(例如,“人们说我是妓女”)和因服用抗逆转录病毒药物而被认为感染 HIV(例如,“我丈夫的朋友说我感染了 HIV”)。那些预计会有污名化的参与者不愿意透露 PrEP 的使用情况,并报告了依从性方面的挑战。披露也会导致污名化的经历。在所有地点,第一次访谈中污名化和披露挑战的负面描述更为常见。在第二次访谈中,参与者经常将披露描述为对抗社区层面 PrEP 污名化的“赋权”方式;许多人表示,他们在社区中主动讨论 PrEP(例如,成为“社区 PrEP 大使”),这提高了他们服用 PrEP 和鼓励他人使用 PrEP 的能力。这些赋权的披露经历得益于 HPTN 082 研究的持续活动(例如咨询会议、依从俱乐部),在这些活动中,他们可以讨论与 PrEP 相关的污名化、披露和 PrEP 依从性问题。
污名化和披露问题是非洲 AGYW 新开始接受 PrEP 的最初关注点,但许多人在开始接受 PrEP 的头六个月内被赋予了披露 PrEP 使用的能力,这帮助他们应对污名化,并感到更能够定期服用 PrEP。PrEP 计划可以通过社区和诊所为基础的讨论、依从俱乐部以及使性行为和 PrEP 使用正常化的活动来促进披露,这可以减少污名化,提高 PrEP 的依从性,从而提高有效性。