Owens Christopher, Carter Kaileigh, Grant Morgan J, Hubach Randolph D, Hoffman Matt
Department of Health Behavior, School of Public Health, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas; Center for Health Equity and Evaluation Research, School of Public Health, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas.
Department of Health Behavior, School of Public Health, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas.
J Adolesc Health. 2023 Oct;73(4):625-631. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2023.02.015. Epub 2023 Apr 6.
Parents' attitudes toward contraceptive delivery methods have been shown to impact their adolescents' use of contraceptive methods. However, little is known about the HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) delivery method attitudes of parents of sexual and gender minority (SGM) adolescents assigned male at birth (AMAB). This exploratory, mixed-method formative study examined the PrEP delivery method preferences among a convenience sample of 33 parents of SGM adolescents AMAB who live in Texas.
Participants completed an online survey, where they selected their preferred PrEP method for their SGM adolescent AMAB to use: PrEP as a daily oral pill, a bimonthly injectable, or a yearly implant. Parents answered an open-ended question about their reasons for choosing their preferred method. We analyzed data through descriptive statistics and inductive content analysis.
Findings from this convenience sample suggest that there is not one PrEP delivery method that parents of SGM adolescents AMAB prefer: one third of parents (33.3%) selected PrEP as a daily oral pill, 45.5% selected PrEP as a bimonthly injectable, and 21.2% selected PrEP as an annual implant. Parents cited multiple reasons for selecting a delivery method over another, with the most prevalent reasons being adherence (57.6%), access or cost (21.2%), and generic convenience or ease (21.2%).
Findings from this formative exploratory study sets the stage for future research and intervention development in increasing parental knowledge, preferences, and preference motivations for PrEP delivery methods.
研究表明,父母对避孕方式的态度会影响其青少年子女对避孕方法的使用。然而,对于出生时被认定为男性的性少数群体(SGM)青少年的父母对艾滋病病毒暴露前预防(PrEP)给药方式的态度,我们却知之甚少。这项探索性的混合方法形成性研究调查了居住在德克萨斯州的33名出生时被认定为男性的SGM青少年的父母这一便利样本中对PrEP给药方式的偏好。
参与者完成了一项在线调查,在调查中他们为自己出生时被认定为男性的SGM青少年选择了他们偏好的PrEP方法:每日口服PrEP药丸、每两个月注射一次或每年植入一次。父母回答了一个关于他们选择偏好方法的原因的开放式问题。我们通过描述性统计和归纳性内容分析来分析数据。
这个便利样本的研究结果表明,出生时被认定为男性的SGM青少年的父母并没有偏好某一种PrEP给药方式:三分之一的父母(33.3%)选择每日口服PrEP药丸,45.5%选择每两个月注射一次PrEP,21.2%选择每年植入一次PrEP。父母列举了选择一种给药方式而非另一种的多种原因,最普遍的原因是依从性(57.6%)、可及性或成本(21.2%)以及一般便利性或易用性(21.2%)。
这项形成性探索性研究的结果为未来的研究和干预发展奠定了基础,以增加父母对PrEP给药方式的了解、偏好及偏好动机。