scholarly journals Barriers to linking high-risk jail detainees to HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis

PLoS ONE ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. e0231951
Author(s):  
Nickolas D. Zaller ◽  
Taylor L. Neher ◽  
Makenzie Presley ◽  
Heather Horton ◽  
S. Alexandra Marshall ◽  
...  
BMJ Open ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. e035689
Author(s):  
Anna Larsen ◽  
Kate S Wilson ◽  
John Kinuthia ◽  
G John-Stewart ◽  
BA Richardson ◽  
...  

IntroductionAdolescent girls and young women (AGYW) in sub-Saharan Africa are at high risk of HIV acquisition. Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) demonstration projects observe that AGYW uptake and adherence to PrEP during risk periods is suboptimal. Judgemental interactions with healthcare workers (HCW) and inadequate counselling can be barriers to PrEP use among AGYW. Improving HCW competency and communication to support PrEP delivery to AGYW requires new strategies.Methods and analysisPrEP Implementation for Young Women and Adolescents Program-standardised patient (PrIYA-SP) is a cluster randomised trial of a standardised patient actor (SP) training intervention designed to improve HCW adherence to PrEP guidelines and communication skills. We purposively selected 24 clinics offering PrEP services under fully programmatic conditions in Kisumu County, Kenya. At baseline, unannounced SP ‘mystery shoppers’ present to clinics portraying AGYW in common PrEP scenarios for a cross-sectional assessment of PrEP delivery. Twelve facilities will be randomised to receive a 2-day training intervention, consisting of lectures, role-playing with SPs and group debriefing. Unannounced SPs will repeat the assessment in all 24 sites following the intervention. The primary outcome is quality of PrEP counselling, including adherence to national guidelines and communication skills, scored on a checklist by SPs blinded to intervention assignment. An intention-to-treat (ITT) analysis will evaluate whether the intervention resulted in higher scores within intervention compared with control facilities, adjusted for baseline SP scores and accounting for clustering by facility. We hypothesise that the intervention will improve quality of PrEP counselling compared with standard of care. Results from this study will inform guidelines for PrEP delivery to AGYW in low-resource settings and offer a potentially scalable strategy to improve service delivery for this high-risk group.Ethics and disseminationThe protocol was approved by institutional review boards at Kenyatta National Hospital and University of Washington. An external advisory committee monitors social harms. Results will be disseminated through peer-reviewed journals and presentations.Trial registration numberNCT03875950


2017 ◽  
Vol 22 (25) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alison E Brown ◽  
Hamish Mohammed ◽  
Dana Ogaz ◽  
Peter D Kirwan ◽  
Mandy Yung ◽  
...  

Since October 2015 up to September 2016, HIV diagnoses fell by 32% compared with October 2014–September 2015 among men who have sex with men (MSM) attending selected London sexual health clinics. This coincided with high HIV testing volumes and rapid initiation of treatment on diagnosis. The fall was most apparent in new HIV testers. Intensified testing of high-risk populations, combined with immediately received anti-retroviral therapy and a pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) programme, may make elimination of HIV achievable.


2019 ◽  
pp. 135910531988392
Author(s):  
Marion Di Ciaccio ◽  
Luis Sagaon-Teyssier ◽  
Christel Protière ◽  
Mohamed Mimi ◽  
Marie Suzan-Monti ◽  
...  

Risk perception is one of the several important factors impacting sexual health behaviours. This study investigated the evolution of HIV risk perception on pre-exposure prophylaxis adherence and condom use in men who have sex with men at high risk of HIV and associated factors. Group-based trajectory modelling helped in identifying patterns of risk perception, pre-exposure prophylaxis adherence and condom use over time. The association between the former and the latter two dimensions was then investigated. An estimated 61 per cent ( p < 0.001) of participants perceiving low risk and 100 per cent ( p < 0.001) of those perceiving high risk had systematic pre-exposure prophylaxis adherence, while an estimated 49 per cent ( p < 0.001) and 99.8 per cent ( p < 0.001), respectively, reported low-level condom use.


2019 ◽  
Vol 31 (3) ◽  
pp. 259-272 ◽  
Author(s):  
Costanza Puppo ◽  
Xavier Mabire ◽  
Laurent Cotte ◽  
Daniela Rojas Castro ◽  
Bruno Spire ◽  
...  

ANRS-IPERGAY was a community-based randomized trial investigating the efficacy of sexual activity-based HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) in a population of males and transgender females who had sex with men and were at high risk of HIV infection. We qualitatively analyzed the support provided to participants by community-based health workers (CBHW) throughout the trial's double-blind and open-label extension phases. In particular, we showed that the relationship between participants and CBHW strongly influenced self-managed pill intake. The delicate construction of this relationship, balanced between trust and dependence, played an important role in PrEP adherence. CBHW had to deal with various issues surrounding participants' feelings of empowerment regarding their role in the trial, as well as related tensions between various logics and rationalities. They were essential to participants' continued involvement.


2017 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 201-210 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura Balzer ◽  
Patrick Staples ◽  
Jukka-Pekka Onnela ◽  
Victor DeGruttola

Background: Several cluster-randomized trials are underway to investigate the implementation and effectiveness of a universal test-and-treat strategy on the HIV epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa. We consider nesting studies of pre-exposure prophylaxis within these trials. Pre-exposure prophylaxis is a general strategy where high-risk HIV– persons take antiretrovirals daily to reduce their risk of infection from exposure to HIV. We address how to target pre-exposure prophylaxis to high-risk groups and how to maximize power to detect the individual and combined effects of universal test-and-treat and pre-exposure prophylaxis strategies. Methods: We simulated 1000 trials, each consisting of 32 villages with 200 individuals per village. At baseline, we randomized the universal test-and-treat strategy. Then, after 3 years of follow-up, we considered four strategies for targeting pre-exposure prophylaxis: (1) all HIV– individuals who self-identify as high risk, (2) all HIV– individuals who are identified by their HIV+ partner (serodiscordant couples), (3) highly connected HIV– individuals, and (4) the HIV– contacts of a newly diagnosed HIV+ individual (a ring-based strategy). We explored two possible trial designs, and all villages were followed for a total of 7 years. For each village in a trial, we used a stochastic block model to generate bipartite (male–female) networks and simulated an agent-based epidemic process on these networks. We estimated the individual and combined intervention effects with a novel targeted maximum likelihood estimator, which used cross-validation to data-adaptively select from a pre-specified library the candidate estimator that maximized the efficiency of the analysis. Results: The universal test-and-treat strategy reduced the 3-year cumulative HIV incidence by 4.0% on average. The impact of each pre-exposure prophylaxis strategy on the 4-year cumulative HIV incidence varied by the coverage of the universal test-and-treat strategy with lower coverage resulting in a larger impact of pre-exposure prophylaxis. Offering pre-exposure prophylaxis to serodiscordant couples resulted in the largest reductions in HIV incidence (2% reduction), and the ring-based strategy had little impact (0% reduction). The joint effect was larger than either individual effect with reductions in the 7-year incidence ranging from 4.5% to 8.8%. Targeted maximum likelihood estimation, data-adaptively adjusting for baseline covariates, substantially improved power over the unadjusted analysis, while maintaining nominal confidence interval coverage. Conclusion: Our simulation study suggests that nesting a pre-exposure prophylaxis study within an ongoing trial can lead to combined intervention effects greater than those of universal test-and-treat alone and can provide information about the efficacy of pre-exposure prophylaxis in the presence of high coverage of treatment for HIV+ persons.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document