Department of Public Health, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Nationalestraat 155, B-2000, Antwerp, Belgium.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2020 Jul 31;20(1):704. doi: 10.1186/s12913-020-05568-w.
Strengthening HIV prevention is imperative given the continued high HIV incidence worldwide. The introduction of oral PrEP as a new biomedical HIV prevention tool can be a potential game changer because of its high clinical efficacy and the feasibility of its provision to different key populations. Documenting the existing experience with PrEP service delivery in a variety of real-world settings will inform how its uptake and usage can be maximised.
We conducted a scoping review using the five-step framework provided by Arksey and O'Malley. We systematically searched the existing peer-reviewed international and grey literature describing the implementation of real-world PrEP service delivery models reporting on four key components: the target population of PrEP services, the setting where PrEP was delivered, PrEP providers' professionalisation and PrEP delivery channels. We restricted our search to English language articles. No geographical or time restrictions were set.
This review included 33 articles for charting and analysing of the results. The identified service delivery models showed that PrEP services mainly targeted people at high risk of HIV acquisition, with some models targeting specific key populations, mainly men who have sex with men. PrEP was often delivered centralised and in a clinical or hospital setting. Yet also community-based as well as home-based PrEP delivery models were reported. Providers of PrEP were mainly clinically trained health professionals, but in some rare cases community workers and lay providers also delivered PrEP. In general, in-person visits were used to deliver PrEP. More innovative digital options using mHealth and telemedicine approaches to deliver specific parts of PrEP services are currently being applied in a minority of the service delivery models in mainly high-resource settings.
A range of possible combinations was found between all four components of PrEP service delivery models. This reflects differentiation of care according to different contextual settings. More research is needed on how integration of services in these contexts could be expanded and optimised to respond to key populations with unmet HIV prevention needs in different settings.
鉴于全球范围内持续高的 HIV 发病率,加强 HIV 预防至关重要。口服暴露前预防 (PrEP) 作为一种新的生物医学 HIV 预防工具的引入可能是一个潜在的重大变化,因为它具有很高的临床疗效,并且可以为不同的关键人群提供这种方法。在各种真实环境中记录 PrEP 服务提供的现有经验将为如何最大限度地提高其采用和使用情况提供信息。
我们使用 Arksey 和 O'Malley 提供的五步框架进行了范围综述。我们系统地搜索了现有的同行评议的国际和灰色文献,描述了实施真实世界 PrEP 服务提供模式的情况,报告了四个关键组成部分:PrEP 服务的目标人群、提供 PrEP 的地点、PrEP 提供者的专业化和 PrEP 提供渠道。我们将搜索范围限制为英文文章。没有设置地理或时间限制。
本综述包括 33 篇文章,用于图表和分析结果。确定的服务提供模式表明,PrEP 服务主要针对 HIV 感染风险高的人群,一些模式针对特定的关键人群,主要是男男性行为者。PrEP 通常在集中和临床或医院环境中提供。然而,也有报道称在社区和家庭中提供 PrEP。PrEP 的提供者主要是经过临床培训的卫生专业人员,但在一些罕见情况下,社区工作者和非专业人员也提供 PrEP。一般来说,通过面访提供 PrEP。在少数服务提供模式中,目前正在应用更具创新性的数字选择,使用移动健康和远程医疗方法提供 PrEP 服务的特定部分,这些模式主要在高资源环境中应用。
在 PrEP 服务提供模式的所有四个组成部分之间发现了一系列可能的组合。这反映了根据不同的背景环境对护理进行差异化。需要进一步研究如何在这些环境中整合服务,以扩大和优化服务,以满足不同环境中未满足 HIV 预防需求的关键人群。