Awareness, acceptability, and intention to initiate HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis among pregnant women. - 2022

HIV prevention is critically important during pregnancy, however, pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is underutilized. We conducted a survey of pregnant and non-pregnant women in a high HIV prevalence community in Washington D.C. to evaluate determinants of PrEP initiation during pregnancy. 201 pregnant women and a reference population of 1103 non-pregnant women completed the survey. Among pregnant women, mean age was 26.9 years; the majority were Black with household-incomes below the federal poverty level. Despite low perceived risk of HIV acquisition and low prior awareness of PrEP, 10.5% of respondents planned to initiate PrEP during pregnancy. Pregnant women identified safety, efficacy, and social network and medical provider support as key factors in PrEP uptake intention. The belief that PrEP will "protect (their) baby from HIV" was associated with PrEP uptake intention during pregnancy. Concerns regarding maternal/fetal side effects, and safety in pregnancy or while breastfeeding were not identified as deterrents to uptake intention. When compared to a nonpregnant sample, there were no significant differences in uptake intention between the two samples. These findings support the need for prenatal educational interventions to promote HIV prevention during pregnancy, as well as interventions that center on the role of providers in the provision of PrEP.


English

0954-0121

10.1080/09540121.2021.1916870 [doi]


*Anti-HIV Agents
*HIV Infections
*Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis
Adult
Anti-HIV Agents/tu [Therapeutic Use]
Breast Feeding
Female
HIV Infections/dt [Drug Therapy]
Humans
Intention
Pregnancy
Pregnant Women


MedStar Health Research Institute
MedStar Washington Hospital Center


Women's & Infants' Services


Journal Article