AI Article Synopsis

  • Combining support for transgender and nonbinary people with HIV prevention methods might help reduce their higher risk of HIV.
  • A study with 366 trans adults asked them what factors are most important when choosing to use a specific HIV prevention shot called LA-PrEP.
  • The results showed that trans adults prefer receiving LA-PrEP from a provider who understands their gender needs, wants both oral and injection hormones, and likes the idea of getting a shot in their arm for a whole year of protection.

Article Abstract

Integrating gender-affirming care with biomedical HIV prevention could help address the disproportionate HIV risk experienced by transgender and nonbinary (trans) adults. This discrete choice experiment assesses and identifies the most important programming factors influencing the decisions of trans adults to use injectable long-acting HIV pre-exposure prophylaxes (LA-PrEP). From March to April 2023 n = 366 trans adults in Washington state chose between four different choice profiles that presented hypothetical programs (each comprised of 5 attributes with 4 levels). We analyzed ranked choice responses using a mixed rank-ordered logit model for main effects. Respondents preferred to receive LA-PrEP from a gender-affirming care provider and a co-prescription for both oral and injectable hormones. Trans adults strongly favored 12-month protection and injection in the upper arm. No strong preferences emerged surrounding the type of health facility offering the gender-affirming LA-PrEP program. Our findings show that integrating and leveraging gender-affirming health systems, inclusive of medical services such as hormone therapy, with HIV biomedical products like LA-PrEP is strongly preferred and influential to trans adults' decision to use LA-PrEP. Leveraging choice-based design experiments provides informative results for optimizing gender-affirming LA-PrEP programming tailored to trans adults.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11461737PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-72920-zDOI Listing

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