Cunningham Hayley E, Davis Dirk A, Burns Charles M, Link Katherine, LeGrand Sara, Kelley Carly, Whetten Kathryn, McKellar Mehri S
From the Department of Infectious Diseases, Duke University Hospital.
Department of Implementation Science, Wake Forest University School of Medicine.
South Med J. 2025 Jul;118(7):357-364. doi: 10.14423/SMJ.0000000000001852.
Sexual and gender minority (SGM) communities at increased risk of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) may be underprescribed preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP), but PrEP research on SGM communities other than transgender women and cisgender men who have sex with men is limited. We sought to better understand SGM individuals' vulnerability to HIV acquisition and awareness and perceptions of PrEP in North Carolina, with a focus on SGM groups less often included in research.
We administered a 37-item online survey to adult SGM participants, examining differences in perceived and behavioral HIV risk based on self-reported behaviors. We also compared PrEP awareness, prescriptions, and stigma between SGM identities and used logistic regression to examine associations between HIV risk and PrEP use.
In total, 372 participants completed the survey. Although 30.9% reported behaviors that increase the likelihood of HIV acquisition, only 9.5% perceived their risk as elevated. Most (78.5%) were aware of PrEP, but only 15.1% had been prescribed PrEP. PrEP stigma was most pervasive among cisgender women. Nonbinary and queer participants were more likely to have experienced mistreatment by a provider (20.3%, < 0.0001; 19.2%, < 0.01) and avoid care fearing mistreatment (31.9%, < 0.001; 27.7%; < 0.001) compared with the entire sample.
PrEP is prescribed at low rates across many SGM communities, with misperception of HIV risk, PrEP stigma, and mistreatment in health care identified as important barriers. Healthcare providers should take steps to create a safe environment for SGM patients and ask all patients about HIV risk factors and provide information about PrEP regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity.
感染人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)风险较高的性少数和性别少数(SGM)群体可能接受暴露前预防(PrEP)的处方不足,但除了跨性别女性和与男性发生性行为的顺性别男性之外,针对SGM群体的PrEP研究有限。我们试图更好地了解北卡罗来纳州SGM个体感染HIV的易感性以及对PrEP的知晓情况和看法,重点关注研究中较少纳入的SGM群体。
我们对成年SGM参与者进行了一项包含37个条目的在线调查,根据自我报告的行为来检查感知到的和行为上的HIV风险差异。我们还比较了不同SGM身份之间的PrEP知晓情况、处方情况和耻辱感,并使用逻辑回归来检查HIV风险与PrEP使用之间的关联。
共有372名参与者完成了调查。尽管30.9%的人报告了会增加感染HIV可能性的行为,但只有9.5%的人认为自己的风险较高。大多数人(78.5%)知晓PrEP,但只有15.1%的人曾被开具PrEP处方。PrEP耻辱感在顺性别女性中最为普遍。与整个样本相比,非二元性别和酷儿参与者更有可能经历过提供者的虐待(分别为20.3%,<0.0001;19.2%,<0.01),并且因担心受到虐待而避免就医(分别为31.9%,<0.001;27.7%,<0.001)。
在许多SGM群体中,PrEP的处方率较低,对HIV风险的误解、PrEP耻辱感以及医疗保健中的虐待被确定为重要障碍。医疗保健提供者应采取措施为SGM患者创造一个安全的环境,并询问所有患者的HIV风险因素,无论其性取向或性别认同如何,都提供有关PrEP的信息。