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AbstractIntroductionTransfeminine adults are impacted by the HIV epidemic in the Philippines, and newly approved modalities of pre‐exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), including long‐acting injectable (LAI‐PrEP), could be beneficial for this group. To inform implementation, we analysed PrEP awareness, discussion and interest in taking LAI‐PrEP among Filipina transfeminine adults.MethodsWe utilized secondary data from the #ParaSaAtin survey that sampled Filipina transfeminine adults (n = 139) and conducted a series of multivariable logistic regressions with lasso selection to explore factors independently associated with PrEP outcomes, including awareness, discussion with trans friends and interest in LAI‐PrEP.ResultsOverall, 53% of Filipina transfeminine respondents were aware of PrEP, 39% had discussed PrEP with their trans friends and 73% were interested in LAI‐PrEP. PrEP awareness was associated with being non‐Catholic (p = 0.017), having previously been HIV tested (p = 0.023), discussing HIV services with a provider (p<0.001) and having high HIV knowledge (p = 0.021). Discussing PrEP with friends was associated with older age (p = 0.040), having experienced healthcare discrimination due to transgender identity (p = 0.044), having HIV tested (p = 0.001) and having discussed HIV services with a provider (p < 0.001). Very interested in LAI‐PrEP was associated with living in Central Visayas (p = 0.045), having discussed HIV services with a provider (p = 0.001) and having discussed HIV services with a sexual partner (p = 0.008).ConclusionsImplementing LAI‐PrEP in the Philippines requires addressing systemic improvements across personal, interpersonal, social and structural levels in healthcare access, including efforts to create healthcare settings and environments with providers who are trained and competent in transgender health and can address the social and structural drivers of trans health inequities, including HIV and barriers to LAI‐PrEP.
AbstractIntroductionWith recent approvals of long‐acting (LA) HIV pre‐exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) in the form of injectable cabotegravir and the dapivirine ring, programmes need to consider how to optimize the delivery of PrEP methods, including by leveraging lessons from the past decade of oral PrEP delivery.DiscussionFramed around differentiated service delivery building blocks, the major considerations for the delivery of LA PrEP are how to reach the populations who would most benefit from PrEP, where to locate PrEP services, how to reduce the user burden of accessing and continuing with PrEP, and how to integrate PrEP with other services. Demand creation for LA PrEP and education about new LA PrEP options should be co‐developed with communities and be positively framed. Client‐facing clinical decision support tools provide information about HIV prevention and PrEP options in non‐technical ways and can support their informed decision‐making about PrEP. Training for providers is needed to increase their ability to ask about sexual and drug use behaviours in a non‐judgmental and comfortable manner as part of risk assessment, discuss harm reduction strategies and counsel about available PrEP options that fit clients' circumstances and needs. PrEP adherence support should include supportive counselling and be tailored to address an individual's particular barriers and needs. Reminders through text messaging or calls can foster PrEP persistence, given the narrow the window around dosing for injectable cabotegravir. Strategies are needed to expand PrEP delivery options, including telePrEP, pharmacy‐based PrEP, key population‐led services and mobile venues. Integrated delivery models are needed which include sexually transmitted infection testing and treatment, contraception for cis‐women not desiring to become pregnant, PrEP for pregnant women in high HIV prevalence settings, and gender‐affirming hormones and support for transgender persons.ConclusionsThe outcome of expanding PrEP options through LA PrEP formulations is to increase PrEP coverage, adherence, persistence and effectiveness by offering a choice of PrEP that meets the needs of persons who would benefit from PrEP. The lessons learned from the delivery of oral PrEP about demand creation, informed client decision‐making, provider training, adherence support and service delivery model are relevant to the delivery of LA PrEP and integration with other services.
Although oral PrEP is highly effective at preventing HIV acquisition, optimizing continuation among beneficiaries is challenging in many settings. We estimated the costs of delivering oral PrEP to populations at risk of HIV in seven clinics in Zimbabwe. Full annual economic costs of oral PrEP initiations and continuation visits were estimated from the providers' perspective for a six-clinic NGO network and one government SGBV clinic in Zimbabwe (January–December 2018). Disaggregating costs of full initiation and incremental follow-up visits enabled modeling of the impact of duration of continuation on the cost per person-year ($pPY) on PrEP. 4677 people initiated oral PrEP, averaging 2.7 follow-up visits per person. Average cost per person initiated was $238 ($183–$302 across the NGO clinics; $86 in the government facility). The full cost per initiation visit, including central and direct costs, was $178, and the incremental cost per follow-up visit, capturing only additional resources used directly in the follow up visits, was $22. The average duration of continuation was 3.0 months, generating an average $pPY of $943, ranging from $839 among adolescent girls and young women to $1219 in men. Oral PrEP delivery costs varied substantially by scale of initiations and by duration of continuation and type of clinic. Extending the average oral PrEP continuation from 2.7 to 5 visits (about 6 months) would greatly improve service efficiency, cutting the $pPY by more than half.
Although oral PrEP is highly effective at preventing HIV acquisition, optimizing continuation among beneficiaries is challenging in many settings. We estimated the costs of delivering oral PrEP to populations at risk of HIV in seven clinics in Zimbabwe. Full annual economic costs of oral PrEP initiations and continuation visits were estimated from the providers' perspective for a six-clinic NGO network and one government SGBV clinic in Zimbabwe (January-December 2018). Disaggregating costs of full initiation and incremental follow-up visits enabled modeling of the impact of duration of continuation on the cost per person-year ($pPY) on PrEP. 4677 people initiated oral PrEP, averaging 2.7 follow-up visits per person. Average cost per person initiated was $238 ($183-$302 across the NGO clinics; $86 in the government facility). The full cost per initiation visit, including central and direct costs, was $178, and the incremental cost per follow-up visit, capturing only additional resources used directly in the follow up visits, was $22. The average duration of continuation was 3.0 months, generating an average $pPY of $943, ranging from $839 among adolescent girls and young women to $1219 in men. Oral PrEP delivery costs varied substantially by scale of initiations and by duration of continuation and type of clinic. Extending the average oral PrEP continuation from 2.7 to 5 visits (about 6 months) would greatly improve service efficiency, cutting the $pPY by more than half.
Although oral PrEP is highly effective at preventing HIV acquisition, optimizing continuation among beneficiaries is challenging in many settings. We estimated the costs of delivering oral PrEP to populations at risk of HIV in seven clinics in Zimbabwe. Full annual economic costs of oral PrEP initiations and continuation visits were estimated from the providers' perspective for a six-clinic NGO network and one government SGBV clinic in Zimbabwe (January–December 2018). Disaggregating costs of full initiation and incremental follow-up visits enabled modeling of the impact of duration of continuation on the cost per person-year ($pPY) on PrEP. 4677 people initiated oral PrEP, averaging 2.7 follow-up visits per person. Average cost per person initiated was $238 ($183–$302 across the NGO clinics; $86 in the government facility). The full cost per initiation visit, including central and direct costs, was $178, and the incremental cost per follow-up visit, capturing only additional resources used directly in the follow up visits, was $22. The average duration of continuation was 3.0 months, generating an average $pPY of $943, ranging from $839 among adolescent girls and young women to $1219 in men. Oral PrEP delivery costs varied substantially by scale of initiations and by duration of continuation and type of clinic. Extending the average oral PrEP continuation from 2.7 to 5 visits (about 6 months) would greatly improve service efficiency, cutting the $pPY by more than half. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10461-021-03367-w.
In der vorliegenden Masterthesis wird zur Diskussion gestellt, was im Hinblick auf die prophylaktische und biomolekulare Schutzwirkung der Präexpositionsprophylaxe (PrEP) als Safer Sex gedacht werden kann, bzw. wie risikobehaftetes Sexualverhalten verhandelt wird. In diesem Zusammenhang nimmt die PrEP als pharmakologische Substanz die Rolle einer nichtmenschlichen Akteurin ein, die soziokulturelle Affekte in Bezug auf Risikoverhalten und sexuelle Gesundheit entfesselt, sowie Diskussionen über Moral und verantwortungsvolle Subjekte produziert. Ausgehend von der Forschungsfrage, wie Biotechnologie in Form der PrEP Einfluss auf M*SM*-Sexualitäten und Vorstellungen von Normalität nimmt und dabei neue Formen der Beziehungen, des Begehrens sowie des Fühlens hervorbringt, soll die erlebte Ambivalenz dieser neuen HIV-Präventionstechnologie mit der qualitativen Methode des narrativen Peer-Interviews empirisch erfasst werden.
International audience ; PrEP (Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis) is a relatively new drug-based HIV prevention technique and an important means to lower the HIV risk of gay men who are especially vulnerable to HIV. From the perspective of biopolitics, PrEP inscribes itself in a larger trend of medicalization and the rise of pharmapower. This article reconstructs and evaluates contemporary literature on biopolitical theory as it applies to PrEP, by bringing it in a dialogue with a mapping of the political debate on PrEP. As PrEP changes sexual norms and subjectification, for example condom use and its meaning for gay subjectivity, it is highly contested. The article shows that the debate on PrEP can be best described with the concepts 'sexual-somatic ethics' and 'democratic biopolitics', which I develop based on the biopolitical approach of Nikolas Rose and Paul Rabinow. In contrast, interpretations of PrEP which are following governmentality studies or Italian Theory amount to either farfetched or trivial positions on PrEP, when seen in light of the political debate. Furthermore, the article is a contribution to the scholarship on gay subjectivity, highlighting how homophobia and homonormativity haunts gay sex even in liberal environments, and how PrEP can serve as an entry point for the destigmatization of gay sexuality and transformation of gay subjectivity. 'Biopolitical democratization' entails making explicit how medical technology and health care relates to sexual subjectification and ethics, to strengthen the voice of (potential) PrEP users in health politics, and to renegotiate the profit and power of Big Pharma.