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HIV prevention among transgender women in Latin America: implementation, gaps and challenges

INTRODUCTION: Transgender women are the population most vulnerable to HIV in Latin America, with prevalence between 18 and 38%. Although the region has improved antiretroviral coverage, there is an urgent need to strengthen HIV prevention for key populations to meet regional targets set by governmen...

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Autores principales: Silva-Santisteban, Alfonso, Eng, Shirley, de la Iglesia, Gabriela, Falistocco, Carlos, Mazin, Rafael
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International AIDS Society 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4949309/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27431470
http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.19.3.20799
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author Silva-Santisteban, Alfonso
Eng, Shirley
de la Iglesia, Gabriela
Falistocco, Carlos
Mazin, Rafael
author_facet Silva-Santisteban, Alfonso
Eng, Shirley
de la Iglesia, Gabriela
Falistocco, Carlos
Mazin, Rafael
author_sort Silva-Santisteban, Alfonso
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Transgender women are the population most vulnerable to HIV in Latin America, with prevalence between 18 and 38%. Although the region has improved antiretroviral coverage, there is an urgent need to strengthen HIV prevention for key populations to meet regional targets set by governments. We conducted an assessment on the state of HIV prevention among transgender women in Latin America. METHODS: We conducted a desk review of Global AIDS Response Progress Reports, national strategic plans, technical reports and peer-reviewed articles from 17 Latin American countries published through January 2015. The review was preceded by 12 semi-structured interviews with UNAIDS and Pan American Health Organization officers and a discussion group with transgender women regional leaders, to guide the identification of documents. We assessed access to, implementation and coverage of programmes; legal frameworks; community participation; inclusion of new strategies; and alignment with international recommendations. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: Overall, prevention activities in the region focus on condom distribution, diagnosis of sexually transmitted infections and peer education, mostly delivered at health facilities, with limited community involvement. Argentina and Uruguay have implemented structural interventions to address social inclusion. Argentina, Brazil and Mexico have adopted early initiation of antiretroviral therapy and treatment as prevention strategies. The other countries do not have substantial tailored interventions and consider the trans population a sub-population of men who have sex with men in data collection and programme implementation. Limited coverage of services, discrimination and a deep-seated mistrust of the health system among transgender women are the main barriers to accessing HIV prevention services. Promising interventions include health services adapted to transgender women in Mexico; LGBT-friendly clinics in Argentina that incorporate community and health workers in mixed teams; task-shifting to community-based organizations; mobile HIV testing; and gender identity laws. CONCLUSIONS: Transgender women in Latin America continue to have limited access to HIV prevention services, which presents a bottleneck for reaching prevention goals and incorporating new prevention interventions. Prevention programmes should be rights-based; offer tailored, holistic interventions; and involve transgender women in their design and implementation.
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spelling pubmed-49493092016-07-25 HIV prevention among transgender women in Latin America: implementation, gaps and challenges Silva-Santisteban, Alfonso Eng, Shirley de la Iglesia, Gabriela Falistocco, Carlos Mazin, Rafael J Int AIDS Soc Review Article INTRODUCTION: Transgender women are the population most vulnerable to HIV in Latin America, with prevalence between 18 and 38%. Although the region has improved antiretroviral coverage, there is an urgent need to strengthen HIV prevention for key populations to meet regional targets set by governments. We conducted an assessment on the state of HIV prevention among transgender women in Latin America. METHODS: We conducted a desk review of Global AIDS Response Progress Reports, national strategic plans, technical reports and peer-reviewed articles from 17 Latin American countries published through January 2015. The review was preceded by 12 semi-structured interviews with UNAIDS and Pan American Health Organization officers and a discussion group with transgender women regional leaders, to guide the identification of documents. We assessed access to, implementation and coverage of programmes; legal frameworks; community participation; inclusion of new strategies; and alignment with international recommendations. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: Overall, prevention activities in the region focus on condom distribution, diagnosis of sexually transmitted infections and peer education, mostly delivered at health facilities, with limited community involvement. Argentina and Uruguay have implemented structural interventions to address social inclusion. Argentina, Brazil and Mexico have adopted early initiation of antiretroviral therapy and treatment as prevention strategies. The other countries do not have substantial tailored interventions and consider the trans population a sub-population of men who have sex with men in data collection and programme implementation. Limited coverage of services, discrimination and a deep-seated mistrust of the health system among transgender women are the main barriers to accessing HIV prevention services. Promising interventions include health services adapted to transgender women in Mexico; LGBT-friendly clinics in Argentina that incorporate community and health workers in mixed teams; task-shifting to community-based organizations; mobile HIV testing; and gender identity laws. CONCLUSIONS: Transgender women in Latin America continue to have limited access to HIV prevention services, which presents a bottleneck for reaching prevention goals and incorporating new prevention interventions. Prevention programmes should be rights-based; offer tailored, holistic interventions; and involve transgender women in their design and implementation. International AIDS Society 2016-07-17 /pmc/articles/PMC4949309/ /pubmed/27431470 http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.19.3.20799 Text en © 2016 Silva-Santisteban A et al; licensee International AIDS Society http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported (CC BY 3.0) License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Review Article
Silva-Santisteban, Alfonso
Eng, Shirley
de la Iglesia, Gabriela
Falistocco, Carlos
Mazin, Rafael
HIV prevention among transgender women in Latin America: implementation, gaps and challenges
title HIV prevention among transgender women in Latin America: implementation, gaps and challenges
title_full HIV prevention among transgender women in Latin America: implementation, gaps and challenges
title_fullStr HIV prevention among transgender women in Latin America: implementation, gaps and challenges
title_full_unstemmed HIV prevention among transgender women in Latin America: implementation, gaps and challenges
title_short HIV prevention among transgender women in Latin America: implementation, gaps and challenges
title_sort hiv prevention among transgender women in latin america: implementation, gaps and challenges
topic Review Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4949309/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27431470
http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.19.3.20799
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