Christopoulos Katerina A, Erguera Xavier A, VanderZanden Lyndon, Campbell Chadwick, Green Maya, Tsuzuki Manami Diaz, Schneider John, Coffey Susa, Bacon Oliver, Gandhi Monica, Koester Kimberly A
University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USA.
Howard Brown Health, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Open Forum Infect Dis. 2021 Sep 17;8(12):ofab469. doi: 10.1093/ofid/ofab469. eCollection 2021 Dec.
Guidelines recommend immediate antiretroviral therapy (ART) at or shortly after human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) diagnosis, yet little is known about how people living with HIV (PLWH) experience this treatment strategy, including racial/ethnic minorities, cisgender/transgender women, and those with housing instability.
To assess the acceptability of immediate ART offer among urban PLWH, understand how this approach affects the lived experience of HIV diagnosis, and explore reasons for declining immediate ART, we conducted a cross-sectional qualitative study using semi-structured interviews with individuals who had been offered immediate ART after HIV diagnosis at a safety-net HIV clinic in San Francisco and a federally qualified health center in Chicago. Interviews were analyzed using thematic analysis.
Among 40 participants with age range 19-52 years, 27% of whom were cisgender/transgender women or gender-queer, 85% racial/ethnic minority, and 45% homeless/unstably housed, we identified 3 major themes: (1) Individuals experienced immediate ART encounters as supportive; (2) individuals viewed immediate ART as sensible; and (3) immediate ART offered emotional relief by offsetting fears of death and providing agency over one's health. Reasons for declining immediate ART ranged from simply needing a few more days to complex interactions of logistical and psychosocial barriers.
Immediate ART was highly acceptable to urban persons with newly diagnosed HIV infection. Immediate ART was viewed as a natural next step after HIV diagnosis and provided a sense of control over one's health, mitigating anxiety over a decline in physical health. As such, immediate ART somewhat eased but in no way obviated the psychosocial challenges of HIV diagnosis.
指南建议在人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)诊断时或之后不久立即开始抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART),然而,对于HIV感染者(PLWH),包括种族/族裔少数群体、顺性别/跨性别女性以及住房不稳定者,如何体验这种治疗策略知之甚少。
为了评估城市PLWH中立即提供ART的可接受性,了解这种方法如何影响HIV诊断后的生活体验,并探讨拒绝立即接受ART的原因,我们进行了一项横断面定性研究,对在旧金山的一家安全网HIV诊所和芝加哥的一家联邦合格健康中心被诊断出HIV后被提供立即ART的个体进行了半结构化访谈。访谈采用主题分析法进行分析。
在40名年龄在19 - 52岁之间的参与者中,27%为顺性别/跨性别女性或性别酷儿,85%为种族/族裔少数群体,45%无家可归/住房不稳定,我们确定了3个主要主题:(1)个体将立即接受ART的经历视为支持性的;(2)个体认为立即接受ART是明智的;(3)立即接受ART通过消除对死亡的恐惧并提供对自身健康的掌控感而带来情绪缓解。拒绝立即接受ART的原因从仅仅需要多几天时间到后勤和心理社会障碍的复杂相互作用不等。
立即接受ART对于新诊断出HIV感染的城市人群来说是高度可接受的。立即接受ART被视为HIV诊断后的自然下一步,并提供了对自身健康的掌控感,减轻了对身体健康下降的焦虑。因此,立即接受ART在一定程度上缓解了但绝没有消除HIV诊断带来的心理社会挑战。