Department of Public Health, University of Copenhagen, Øster Farimagsgade 5, 1014, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Manicaland Centre for Public Health Research, Biomedical Research and Training Institute, 10 Seagrave Avondale, Harare, Zimbabwe.
Res Social Adm Pharm. 2023 Feb;19(2):266-271. doi: 10.1016/j.sapharm.2022.10.008. Epub 2022 Oct 25.
Pre-exposure prophylaxis, or PrEP, is a pill that has been hailed as a 'game changer' for HIV prevention, based on the belief it provides adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) with a level of user-control. However, engagement with PrEP is often dependent on societal factors, such as social attitudes towards gender, sexuality, and PrEP. As parents' communication on sexual and reproductive health issues with AGYW are central to HIV prevention, it is critical to explore how parents talk and think about PrEP.
To examine parental attitudes towards PrEP for HIV prevention amongst adolescent girls and young women in eastern Zimbabwe.
A qualitative interview study with 14 parents from two districts in Manicaland, eastern Zimbabwe. Interviews were transcribed, translated, and subjected to thematic network analysis. The concept of 'attitudes' steered the analytical work.
Parents' attitudes towards PrEP are conflictual, multi-layered, and contingent on the context in which they reflect and talk about PrEP. While parents aspired to be supportive of innovative HIV prevention methods and wanted to see girl-children protected from HIV, they struggled to reconcile this positive and accepting attitude towards PrEP with traditional 'good girl' notions, which stigmatize pre-marital sex. Although a few parents articulated an acceptance of PrEP use amongst their daughters, for many this was simply not possible. Many parents thus co-produce public gender orders that prevent adolescent girls and young women from engaging with PrEP.
While parents' conflicting attitudes towards PrEP may provide spaces and opportunities for change, harmful gender norms and negative attitudes towards PrEP must be addressed at a community and cultural level. Only then can parents and their children have productive conversations about sexual health.
暴露前预防(PrEP)是一种药丸,被誉为 HIV 预防的“游戏规则改变者”,这是基于它为少女和年轻女性(AGYW)提供了一定程度的用户控制的信念。然而,参与 PrEP 的情况往往取决于社会因素,例如社会对性别、性和 PrEP 的态度。由于父母与 AGYW 就性和生殖健康问题进行的沟通是 HIV 预防的核心,因此探索父母如何谈论和思考 PrEP 至关重要。
在津巴布韦东部的马尼卡兰两个地区,调查父母对 PrEP 预防 HIV 的态度。
采用定性访谈研究,对来自津巴布韦东部马尼卡兰两个地区的 14 名父母进行了访谈。访谈记录被转录、翻译,并进行主题网络分析。分析工作以“态度”这一概念为指导。
父母对 PrEP 预防 HIV 的态度是矛盾的、多层次的,并且取决于他们反思和谈论 PrEP 的背景。虽然父母渴望支持创新的 HIV 预防方法,并希望看到女孩免受 HIV 感染,但他们很难将这种对 PrEP 的积极和接受的态度与传统的“好女孩”观念调和起来,因为后者将婚前性行为污名化。尽管少数父母明确表示接受女儿使用 PrEP,但对许多父母来说,这是不可能的。因此,许多父母共同构建了阻止少女和年轻女性使用 PrEP 的公共性别秩序。
尽管父母对 PrEP 的矛盾态度可能为改变提供了空间和机会,但必须在社区和文化层面上解决有害的性别规范和对 PrEP 的负面态度。只有这样,父母和他们的孩子才能就性健康进行富有成效的对话。