Document detail
ID

doi:10.1186/s13722-024-00476-4...

Author
Harris, Miriam TH Weinberger, Emma O’Brien, Christine Althoff, Mary Paltrow-Krulwich, Samantha Taylor, Jessica L. Judge, Abigail Samet, Jeffrey H. Walley, Alexander Y. Gunn, Christine M.
Langue
en
Editor

BioMed Central

Category

Medicine & Public Health

Year

2024

listing date

6/5/2024

Keywords
hiv prevention prep women drug use sex work continuum sex reduction harm settings prep wswud bridge hiv adherence included care substance facilitators barriers clinic
Metrics

Abstract

Background Women who engage in sex work and use drugs (WSWUD) experience disproportionate HIV risks.

Substance use treatment bridge clinics offer an opportunity to increase HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) delivery to WSWUD, but research on best practices is lacking.

Therefore, we explored facilitators and barriers to PrEP across the PrEP care continuum in these settings.

Methods Bridge clinic and affiliated harm reduction health service providers and WSWUD from Boston were recruited using passive and active outreach between December 2021 and August 2022.

Participants were invited to take part in semi-structured phone or in-person interviews to explore HIV prevention and PrEP care experiences overall and within bridge clinic settings.

Deductive codes were developed based on HIV risk environment frameworks and the Information-Motivation-Behavioral Skills model and inductive codes were added based on transcript review.

Grounded content analysis was used to generate themes organized around the PrEP care continuum.

Results The sample included 14 providers and 25 WSWUD.

Most WSWUD were aware of PrEP and more than half had initiated PrEP at some point.

However, most who initiated PrEP did not report success with daily oral adherence.

Providers and WSWUD described facilitators and barriers to PrEP across the steps of the care continuum: Awareness, uptake, adherence, and retention.

Facilitators for WSWUD included non-stigmatizing communication with providers, rapid wraparound substance use treatment and HIV services, having a PrEP routine, and service structures to support PrEP adherence.

Barriers included low HIV risk perceptions and competing drug use and survival priorities.

Provider facilitators included clinical note templates prompting HIV risk assessments and training.

Barriers included discomfort discussing sex work risks, competing clinical priorities, and a lack of PrEP adherence infrastructure.

Conclusion WSWUD and bridge clinic providers favored integrated HIV prevention and substance use services in harm reduction and bridge clinic settings.

Harm reduction and bridge clinic programs played a key role in HIV prevention and PrEP education for WSWUD.

Effective behavioral and structural interventions are still needed to improve PrEP adherence for WSWUD.

Harris, Miriam TH,Weinberger, Emma,O’Brien, Christine,Althoff, Mary,Paltrow-Krulwich, Samantha,Taylor, Jessica L.,Judge, Abigail,Samet, Jeffrey H.,Walley, Alexander Y.,Gunn, Christine M., 2024, PrEP facilitators and barriers in substance use bridge clinics for women who engage in sex work and who use drugs, BioMed Central

Document

Open

Share

Source

Articles recommended by ES/IODE AI

A Novel MR Imaging Sequence of 3D-ZOOMit Real Inversion-Recovery Imaging Improves Endolymphatic Hydrops Detection in Patients with Ménière Disease
ménière disease p < detection imaging sequences 3d-zoomit 3d endolymphatic real tse reconstruction ir inversion-recovery hydrops ratio
Successful omental flap coverage repair of a rectovaginal fistula after low anterior resection: a case report
rectovaginal fistula rectal cancer low anterior resection omental flap muscle flap rectal cancer pod initial repair rvf flap omental lar coverage