Perspectives of Young Men Who Have Sex with Men on PrEP Adherence and Peer Navigation: A Qualitative Study

被引:0
作者
Samantha M. McKetchnie
Bradley White
Holly Fontenot
Julian Dormitzer
Christina Psaros
Calvin Fitch
Conall O’Cleirigh
Kenneth H. Mayer
Douglas S. Krakower
机构
[1] Massachusetts General Hospital,Behavioral Medicine Program, Department of Psychiatry
[2] Boston College,School of Social Work
[3] The Fenway Institute,Department of Nursing
[4] Fenway Health,Nancy Atmospera
[5] MGH Institute of Health Professionals,Walch School of Nursing
[6] University of Hawaii at Manoa,Harvard Medical School
[7] Harvard University,Division of Infectious Diseases
[8] Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center,undefined
来源
Archives of Sexual Behavior | 2023年 / 52卷
关键词
PrEP; Men who have sex with men (MSM); Youth; Peer navigation; Sexual orientation;
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
HIV incidence is disproportionately high among young cisgender men who have sex with men (YMSM), but YMSM are less likely than adults to use HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP). Among YMSM living with HIV, peer navigation programs have been effective in linkage to care and increasing medication adherence; such programs may aid HIV-uninfected YMSM in overcoming barriers to engagement in PrEP care. We conducted 32 semi-structured qualitative interviews at a community health center in Massachusetts, USA, specializing in sexual and gender minority health with four sub-groups of YMSM who: (1) had never discussed PrEP with a medical provider, (2) had discussed PrEP with a medical provider but declined a prescription, (3) were prescribed PrEP and have sub-optimal adherence (taking fewer than 4 pills per week), and (4) were prescribed PrEP and were optimally adherent. Domains addressed in the interviews included knowledge of PrEP and HIV prevention, barriers and facilitators to PrEP adherence, and attitudes toward peer navigation for PrEP. Interviews were transcribed and coded using thematic analysis methodology. Multiple themes emerged from the interviews, including finding that perceived costs, anticipated stigma, sexual activity, and relationship status influence PrEP uptake and adherence; establishing pill-taking routines is an important adherence facilitator; and peer navigators could offer benefits for PrEP adherence.
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页码:2037 / 2049
页数:12
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