This pilot study will assess the feasibility and acceptability of a peer outreach and navigation intervention designed to increase access and promote HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) uptake among women at high risk for HIV.
Women who engage in exchange sex (i.e., sex in exchange for money, drugs, or other services) remain are at substantial risk for HIV infection. (1-6) Due to a confluence of social and structural factors, exchange sex is relatively prevalent among women from socially and economically marginalized groups, such as women who are transgender, unstably housed/homeless and/or those who use and/or inject drugs. (1-3, 19-23) The overarching goal of this research is to decrease new HIV infections among women who engage in exchange sex. Daily oral HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is an innovative method of HIV prevention that women, themselves, can control; as such, PrEP has the potential to reduce the risk of HIV acquisition among women who engage in exchange sex. Therefore, the investigators developed a theory-guided behavioral intervention (PrEP-UP) which utilizes street-based peer outreach and navigation to increase access to PrEP and promote PrEP uptake among women involved in exchange sex. Specifically, PrEP-UP involves a Peer delivering PrEP education and counseling during street-based outreach followed by offer of a PrEP care appointment along with peer navigation (e.g., appointment accompaniment and reminders, etc.) for the first several PrEP care visits. The objective of this study is to assess the feasibility and acceptability of PrEP-UP. To implement PrEP-UP, the investigators will collaborate with an established community-based organization (CBO) in East Harlem, NY, which uses street-based peer outreach and navigation to connect individuals to needed health and social services. Medical and pharmacy records will be reviewed to assess PrEP initiation. The investigators will conduct self-report surveys at baseline and at a week 4-12 follow-up visit that will collect data about sexual and drug use risk behaviors, perceived HIV risk, and PrEP-related knowledge, attitudes, and self-efficacy to assess for temporal changes in these variables. Additionally, individual interviews will be conducted post-intervention with a subset of the women as well as the CBO staff and leadership to access acceptability of the intervention.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
66
Peer education, counseling, and facilitation of PrEP care
New York Harm Reduction Educators
New York, New York, United States
PrEP prescription filled
Obtained from medical and/or pharmacy records
Time frame: 4-12 weeks
HIV risk behaviors
Revised Risk Behavior Assessment (Wechsberg)
Time frame: week 0, 4-12
HIV risk perception
Perceived HIV Risk Scale (Napper)
Time frame: week 0, 4-12
Interest in PrEP
PrEP Acceptability Scale (Marcus)
Time frame: week 0
PrEP appointment acceptance
PrEP appointment acceptance (yes/ no)
Time frame: week 0
PrEP appointment scheduled
Scheduled PrEP appointment (yes/ no)
Time frame: week 0-12
PrEP appointment attendance
PrEP appointment attendance (yes/ no)
Time frame: week 0-12
PrEP-related knowledge
PrEP Knowledge Scale (Rucinski) (Kalichman) (Kalichman) (Whiteside)
Time frame: week 0, 4-12
PrEP-related attitudes
Attitudes Towards PrEP Measurements (Golub) (Holt) (Mimiaga) (Tobias)
Time frame: week 0, 4-12
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PrEP-related self-efficacy
PrEP Self-Efficacy Scale (adapted from HIV-ASES) (Johnson)
Time frame: week 0, 4-12