Sinno Jad, Doria Nicole, Cochkanoff Nicholas, Numer Matthew, Neyedli Heather, Tan Darrell
School of Health and Human Performance, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada.
Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
HIV AIDS (Auckl). 2021 Feb 5;13:157-170. doi: 10.2147/HIV.S287201. eCollection 2021.
Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is an effective HIV prevention tool that requires the ongoing support of physicians to be accessible. Recently, Nova Scotia experienced a 100% increase in HIV diagnoses. The purpose of this study is to explore the relationship between physicians' support of PrEP, knowledge of PrEP, and PrEP prescribing history using the information-motivation-behavioral (IMB) skills model.
An online survey was distributed to physicians in Nova Scotia, Canada, and eighty physicians participated. Two exploratory factor analyses were conducted with items from the Support of PrEP scale and Knowledge of PrEP scale. A mediation analysis was conducted to assess if knowledge of PrEP mediated the relationship between support of PrEP and whether physicians have prescribed PrEP in the past.
On average, physicians reported strong support for PrEP, and as support for PrEP increased so did knowledge of PrEP. Further, physicians who had prescribed PrEP demonstrated strong knowledge of PrEP and physicians who had not prescribed PrEP reported feeling neutral. The 95% bootstrap confidence interval indirect effect of Support for PrEP on prescription history did not include zero (B = 1.59, 95% BsCI [0.83, 3.57]) demonstrating that the effect of support for PrEP is mediated by knowledge of PrEP. The most commonly identified barrier to prescribing PrEP was the lack of drug coverage among patients.
The results of the mediation analysis support the IMB skills model regarding support for PrEP, Knowledge of PrEP, and having prescribed PrEP in the past. Our findings suggest that to improve PrEP uptake in Nova Scotia, educational interventions for physicians and universal coverage of the drug would be necessary.
暴露前预防(PrEP)是一种有效的艾滋病预防工具,需要医生持续提供支持才能得以推广。最近,新斯科舍省的艾滋病诊断病例增加了100%。本研究旨在利用信息-动机-行为(IMB)技能模型,探讨医生对PrEP的支持、对PrEP的了解以及PrEP处方史之间的关系。
向加拿大新斯科舍省的医生发放了一份在线调查问卷,80名医生参与了调查。对PrEP支持量表和PrEP知识量表的项目进行了两项探索性因素分析。进行了中介分析,以评估PrEP知识是否介导了PrEP支持与医生过去是否开过PrEP处方之间的关系。
平均而言,医生报告对PrEP有强烈支持,随着对PrEP支持的增加,对PrEP的了解也随之增加。此外,开过PrEP处方的医生对PrEP有深入了解,而未开过PrEP处方的医生表示态度中立。PrEP支持对处方史的95%自抽样置信区间间接效应不包括零(B = 1.59,95% BsCI [0.83, 3.57]),表明PrEP支持的效果是由PrEP知识介导的。开PrEP处方最常见的障碍是患者缺乏药物保险。
中介分析结果支持IMB技能模型中关于PrEP支持、PrEP知识以及过去开过PrEP处方的内容。我们的研究结果表明,为提高新斯科舍省PrEP的使用率,有必要对医生进行教育干预并实现该药物的全民覆盖。