Background: Discontinuation of daily oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is frequent among adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) in African settings. We explored factors influencing early PrEP discontinuation and persistence among Kenyan AGYW who accepted PrEP within a programmatic setting. Methods: We conducted in-depth interviews with AGYW (aged 15–24 years) who accepted PrEP from 4 maternal child health (MCH) and family planning (FP) clinics. AGYW were identified by nurses at routine clinic visits and purposively sampled based on 4 categories: (1) accepted PrEP pills, but never initiated PrEP use (eg, never swallowed PrEP pills), (2) discontinued PrEP <1 month after initiation, (3) discontinued PrEP within 1–3 months, and (4) persisted with PrEP use >3 months. Informed by the Stages of Change Model, thematic analysis characterized key influences on PrEP discontinuation/persistence. Results: We conducted 93 in-depth interviews with AGYW who accepted pills. Median age was 22 years, 71% were married; 89% were from MCH, and 11% were from FP clinics. Early PrEP use was positively influenced by encouragement from close confidants and effective concealment of PrEP pill-taking when necessary to avoid stigma or negative reactions from partners. Pregnancy helped conceal PrEP use because pill-taking is normalized during pregnancy, but concealment became more difficult postpartum. AGYW found keeping up with daily PrEP pill-taking challenging, and many noted only episodic periods of the HIV risk. Frequently testing HIV-negative reassured AGYW that PrEP was working and motivated persistence. Discussion: As PrEP programs scale-up in MCH/FP, it is increasingly important to enhance protection-effective PrEP use through approaches tailored to AGYW, with special considerations during pregnancy and postpartum.
BackgroundThere is scant evidence on the association between diagnosis delays and the receipt of test results in HIV Early Infant Diagnosis (EID) programs. We determine the association between diagnosis delays and other health care system and patient factors on result receipt.MethodsWe reviewed 703 infant HIV test records for tests performed between January 2008 and February 2009 at a regional referral hospital and level four health center in Uganda. The main outcome was caregiver receipt of the test result. The primary study variable was turnaround time (time between sample collection and result availability at the health facility). Additional variables included clinic entry point, infant age at sample collection, reported HIV status and receipt of antiretroviral prophylaxis for prevention of mother-to-child transmission. We conducted a pooled analysis in addition to separate analyses for each facility. We estimated the relative risk of result receipt using modified Poisson regression with robust standard errors.ResultsOverall, the median result turnaround time, was 38 days. 59% of caregivers received infant test results. Caregivers were less likely to receive results at turnaround times greater than 49 days compared to 28 days or fewer (ARR = 0.83; 95% CI = 0.70–0.98). Caregivers were more likely to receive results at the PMTCT clinic (ARR = 1.81; 95% CI = 1.40–2.33) and less likely at the pediatric ward (ARR = 0.54; 95% CI = 0.37–0.81) compared to the immunization clinic. At the level four health center, result receipt was half as likely among infants older than 9 months compared to 3 months and younger (ARR= 0.47; 95% CI = 0.25–0.93).ConclusionIn this study setting, we find evidence that longer turnaround times, clinic entry point and age at sample collection may be associated with receipt of infant HIV test results.
We conducted a population-level short message service (SMS)-based survey among individuals aged 18–34 years in six HIV high-burden counties in Western Kenya to assess pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) awareness, acceptability of non-facility PrEP delivery, and willingness to pay for PrEP. In January 2019, anonymous data were collected using mSurvey Inc., Nairobi, Kenya, which sends SMS messages via mobile provider networks to a ‘general audience’ pool of subscribers ≥18 years. Subscribers’ demographic information was matched to Kenyan census data by age, gender, and county. Of the 3825 individuals who received the survey, 2617 (68%) opened the survey and 2498/2617 (95%) completed all questions. Overall, 84% had ever heard of PrEP, of whom 59% demonstrated understanding of PrEP; understanding was greater among men than women (64% versus 55%, p < 0.001). Among participants who understood PrEP (n = 1249), 38% reported pharmacies (informal or formal) as the preferred venue to obtain PrEP. Over half (61%) were willing to pay for PrEP and 78% reported that the maximum amount they were willing to pay for a one-month supply was <5 USD. High awareness of PrEP in high HIV prevalence settings in Kenya suggests effective public health messaging. Willingness to pay and preference for pharmacy access suggest that non-facility PrEP delivery may be useful.
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