Perspectives on Injectable HIV Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis: A Qualitative Study of Health Care Providers in the United States.
Jacob BleasdaleMeghan McColeKenneth ColeAmy HequembourgGene D MorseSarahmona M PrzybylaPublished in: AIDS patient care and STDs (2024)
The introduction of injectable HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) has the potential to significantly change the biomedical HIV prevention landscape. However, effective implementation will require health care providers to adopt, prescribe, and administer injectable PrEP within clinical settings. This study qualitatively examined challenges and benefit of injectable PrEP implementation from the perspective of health care providers. From April to August 2022, we conducted 19 in-depth interviews with current PrEP-prescribing health care providers in New York State, including 3 physician assistants, 5 physicians, and 11 nurse practitioners. Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and thematically analyzed to report semantic-level themes regarding injectable PrEP implementation. More than half of participants (61%) were aware of injectable PrEP; only 21% had experience prescribing it. Qualitative findings highlighted five themes. Three themes represented implementation challenges, including speculative concerns about side effects, appointment compliance, and practical and logistical considerations. The remaining two themes described benefits of injectable PrEP relative to oral PrEP, which included greater convenience and enhanced privacy. Findings from this qualitative study make significant applied contributions to the sparse knowledge on health care provider perspectives of injectable PrEP post-US Food and Drug Administration approval and their concerns and considerations regarding implementation in real-world clinical settings.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- men who have sex with men
- primary care
- hiv testing
- hiv positive
- hyaluronic acid
- tissue engineering
- quality improvement
- drug administration
- hiv infected
- antiretroviral therapy
- hepatitis c virus
- human immunodeficiency virus
- hiv aids
- systematic review
- health information
- drug induced
- artificial intelligence
- adverse drug
- neural network