Cargando…

1554. Facilitators and Barriers to Engaging in PrEP and Gender Affirming Therapy for Black and Latina Transgender Women in South Florida

BACKGROUND: Black and Latina transgender women (BLTW) have the highest HIV rates among transgender women (Black: 62%, Latinx: 35%). PrEP-GAT is an EHE grant which evaluated barriers and facilitators to engagement in PrEP and gender affirming therapy (GAT) services and the use of friendship networks...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Silvey, Rebe, Rosas, Yesenia, Ellick, Kecia L, Johnson, Ariana, Craker, Lacey, Lewis, Susanne Doblecki, Cunningham, Suzanne Randolph, Rehman, Aliya F, Kanamori, Mariano, Beauchamps, Laura
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10679257/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.1389
_version_ 1785150552356683776
author Silvey, Rebe
Rosas, Yesenia
Ellick, Kecia L
Johnson, Ariana
Craker, Lacey
Lewis, Susanne Doblecki
Cunningham, Suzanne Randolph
Rehman, Aliya F
Kanamori, Mariano
Beauchamps, Laura
author_facet Silvey, Rebe
Rosas, Yesenia
Ellick, Kecia L
Johnson, Ariana
Craker, Lacey
Lewis, Susanne Doblecki
Cunningham, Suzanne Randolph
Rehman, Aliya F
Kanamori, Mariano
Beauchamps, Laura
author_sort Silvey, Rebe
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Black and Latina transgender women (BLTW) have the highest HIV rates among transgender women (Black: 62%, Latinx: 35%). PrEP-GAT is an EHE grant which evaluated barriers and facilitators to engagement in PrEP and gender affirming therapy (GAT) services and the use of friendship networks to promote these interventions. METHODS: Participants were recruited through the University of Miami’s GenWell Service, which provides bundled PrEP and GAT. This study has two components: qualitative and social networks. Qualitative component: 20 in-depth interviews focused on barriers and facilitators to PrEP and GAT services using Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) constructs. Data was analyzed using thematic analysis. Social network component: 27 social network-based interviews identified friendship dynamics that could promote conversations and encouragement to engage with PrEP and GAT. Analysis included multilevel logistic regression using R and network visualizations using UCINET. RESULTS: Qualitative Component. Barriers to accessing PrEP and GAT services included cost, need for Spanish-language materials, bias, stigma, and discrimination. Facilitators included access to telehealth, mobile services, pharmacists, and co-located PrEP-GAT services. BLTW were not comfortable disclosing their HIV status due to HIV stigma. “HIV clinics” discouraged individuals from seeking services. Social network component: most participants were using GAT (75%), and more than half reported lifetime PrEP use (56%). Bivariate analysis: having a Latinx friend, a friend who shared GAT status, and higher emotional closeness were associated with future conversations about PrEP and GAT (p< 0.05). Multilevel model: emotional closeness was associated with future conversations about PrEP and GAT (p=0.02). CONCLUSION: Mental health, legal, employment and housing services are needed to meet BLTW access to PrEP. Social network approaches can identify key individuals in BLTW friendship networks to promote and disseminate information about PrEP and GAT. Future Directions: Future research will determine whether bundled PrEP-GAT, social network support, and telehealth is effective to increase BLTW’s engagement in these services. DISCLOSURES: Susanne Doblecki Lewis, MD, MSPH, FIDSA, Gilead Sciences: Grant/Research Support|Janssen: Grant/Research Support|Merck: Grant/Research Support
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10679257
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-106792572023-11-27 1554. Facilitators and Barriers to Engaging in PrEP and Gender Affirming Therapy for Black and Latina Transgender Women in South Florida Silvey, Rebe Rosas, Yesenia Ellick, Kecia L Johnson, Ariana Craker, Lacey Lewis, Susanne Doblecki Cunningham, Suzanne Randolph Rehman, Aliya F Kanamori, Mariano Beauchamps, Laura Open Forum Infect Dis Abstract BACKGROUND: Black and Latina transgender women (BLTW) have the highest HIV rates among transgender women (Black: 62%, Latinx: 35%). PrEP-GAT is an EHE grant which evaluated barriers and facilitators to engagement in PrEP and gender affirming therapy (GAT) services and the use of friendship networks to promote these interventions. METHODS: Participants were recruited through the University of Miami’s GenWell Service, which provides bundled PrEP and GAT. This study has two components: qualitative and social networks. Qualitative component: 20 in-depth interviews focused on barriers and facilitators to PrEP and GAT services using Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) constructs. Data was analyzed using thematic analysis. Social network component: 27 social network-based interviews identified friendship dynamics that could promote conversations and encouragement to engage with PrEP and GAT. Analysis included multilevel logistic regression using R and network visualizations using UCINET. RESULTS: Qualitative Component. Barriers to accessing PrEP and GAT services included cost, need for Spanish-language materials, bias, stigma, and discrimination. Facilitators included access to telehealth, mobile services, pharmacists, and co-located PrEP-GAT services. BLTW were not comfortable disclosing their HIV status due to HIV stigma. “HIV clinics” discouraged individuals from seeking services. Social network component: most participants were using GAT (75%), and more than half reported lifetime PrEP use (56%). Bivariate analysis: having a Latinx friend, a friend who shared GAT status, and higher emotional closeness were associated with future conversations about PrEP and GAT (p< 0.05). Multilevel model: emotional closeness was associated with future conversations about PrEP and GAT (p=0.02). CONCLUSION: Mental health, legal, employment and housing services are needed to meet BLTW access to PrEP. Social network approaches can identify key individuals in BLTW friendship networks to promote and disseminate information about PrEP and GAT. Future Directions: Future research will determine whether bundled PrEP-GAT, social network support, and telehealth is effective to increase BLTW’s engagement in these services. DISCLOSURES: Susanne Doblecki Lewis, MD, MSPH, FIDSA, Gilead Sciences: Grant/Research Support|Janssen: Grant/Research Support|Merck: Grant/Research Support Oxford University Press 2023-11-27 /pmc/articles/PMC10679257/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.1389 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstract
Silvey, Rebe
Rosas, Yesenia
Ellick, Kecia L
Johnson, Ariana
Craker, Lacey
Lewis, Susanne Doblecki
Cunningham, Suzanne Randolph
Rehman, Aliya F
Kanamori, Mariano
Beauchamps, Laura
1554. Facilitators and Barriers to Engaging in PrEP and Gender Affirming Therapy for Black and Latina Transgender Women in South Florida
title 1554. Facilitators and Barriers to Engaging in PrEP and Gender Affirming Therapy for Black and Latina Transgender Women in South Florida
title_full 1554. Facilitators and Barriers to Engaging in PrEP and Gender Affirming Therapy for Black and Latina Transgender Women in South Florida
title_fullStr 1554. Facilitators and Barriers to Engaging in PrEP and Gender Affirming Therapy for Black and Latina Transgender Women in South Florida
title_full_unstemmed 1554. Facilitators and Barriers to Engaging in PrEP and Gender Affirming Therapy for Black and Latina Transgender Women in South Florida
title_short 1554. Facilitators and Barriers to Engaging in PrEP and Gender Affirming Therapy for Black and Latina Transgender Women in South Florida
title_sort 1554. facilitators and barriers to engaging in prep and gender affirming therapy for black and latina transgender women in south florida
topic Abstract
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10679257/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.1389
work_keys_str_mv AT silveyrebe 1554facilitatorsandbarrierstoengaginginprepandgenderaffirmingtherapyforblackandlatinatransgenderwomeninsouthflorida
AT rosasyesenia 1554facilitatorsandbarrierstoengaginginprepandgenderaffirmingtherapyforblackandlatinatransgenderwomeninsouthflorida
AT ellickkecial 1554facilitatorsandbarrierstoengaginginprepandgenderaffirmingtherapyforblackandlatinatransgenderwomeninsouthflorida
AT johnsonariana 1554facilitatorsandbarrierstoengaginginprepandgenderaffirmingtherapyforblackandlatinatransgenderwomeninsouthflorida
AT crakerlacey 1554facilitatorsandbarrierstoengaginginprepandgenderaffirmingtherapyforblackandlatinatransgenderwomeninsouthflorida
AT lewissusannedoblecki 1554facilitatorsandbarrierstoengaginginprepandgenderaffirmingtherapyforblackandlatinatransgenderwomeninsouthflorida
AT cunninghamsuzannerandolph 1554facilitatorsandbarrierstoengaginginprepandgenderaffirmingtherapyforblackandlatinatransgenderwomeninsouthflorida
AT rehmanaliyaf 1554facilitatorsandbarrierstoengaginginprepandgenderaffirmingtherapyforblackandlatinatransgenderwomeninsouthflorida
AT kanamorimariano 1554facilitatorsandbarrierstoengaginginprepandgenderaffirmingtherapyforblackandlatinatransgenderwomeninsouthflorida
AT beauchampslaura 1554facilitatorsandbarrierstoengaginginprepandgenderaffirmingtherapyforblackandlatinatransgenderwomeninsouthflorida