Women’s Perceptions of HIV- and Sexuality-Related Stigma in Relation to PrEP: Qualitative Findings from the Masibambane Study, Durban, South Africa

被引:0
|
作者
S. Bergam
A. D. Harrison
N. Benghu
S. Khumalo
N. Tesfay
T. Exner
L. Miller
C. Dolezal
J. Hanass-Hancock
S. Hoffman
机构
[1] Brown University School of Public Health,Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences
[2] University of KwaZulu Natal,Department of Paediatric Infectious Disease, Nelson Mandela School of Medicine
[3] South African Medical Research Council,Gender and Health Research Unit
[4] Columbia University,Department of Psychiatry
[5] Columbia University,HIV Center for Clinical and Behavioral Studies, NYS Psychiatric Institute
[6] Columbia University,ICAP, Mailman School of Public Health
[7] Columbia University,Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health
来源
AIDS and Behavior | 2022年 / 26卷
关键词
PrEP; HIV stigma; Sexuality; Young women; South Africa;
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Daily oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) offers effective HIV prevention. In South Africa, PrEP is publicly available, but use among young women remains low. We explored young women’s perceptions of PrEP to inform a gender-focused intervention to promote PrEP uptake. Six focus group discussions and eight in-depth interviews exploring perceptions of PrEP were conducted with forty-six women not using PrEP, ages 18–25, from central Durban. Data were thematically analyzed using a team-based consensus approach. The study was conducted among likely PrEP users: women were highly-educated, with 84.8% enrolled in post-secondary education. Qualitative data revealed intersecting social stigmas related to HIV and women’s sexuality. Women feared that daily PrEP pills would be confused with anti-retroviral treatment, creating vulnerability to misplaced HIV stigma. Women also anticipated that taking PrEP could expose them to assumptions of promiscuity from the community. To address these anticipated community-level reactions, women suggested community-facing interventions to reduce the burden on young women considering PrEP. Concerns around PrEP use in this group of urban, educated women reflects layered stigmas that may inhibit future PrEP use. Stigma-reducing strategies, such as media campaigns and educational interventions directed at communities who could benefit from PrEP, should re-frame PrEP as an empowering and responsible choice for young women.
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页码:2881 / 2890
页数:9
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