74 results on '"Calabrese, Sarah"'
Search Results
2. Social and structural factors associated with interest in HIV preexposure prophylaxis among Black women in the United States.
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Irie, Whitney C., Calabrese, Sarah K., Mayer, Kenneth H., Geng, Elvin H., Blackstock, Oni, and Marcus, Julia L.
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HIV prevention ,THERAPEUTICS ,AUTONOMY (Psychology) ,SOCIAL factors ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SOCIAL norms ,DECISION making ,PRE-exposure prophylaxis ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,SOCIAL context ,PSYCHOLOGY of Black people ,CISGENDER people ,MEDICAL appointments ,PHYSICIAN-patient relations ,WOMEN'S health ,HEALTH promotion ,MEDICAL care costs ,SOCIAL stigma - Abstract
In a nationwide sample of cisgender Black women in the US, we assessed the associations between social and structural factors and interest in using HIV preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP). Among 315 respondents, 62.2% were interested in PrEP if it were provided for free. Positive social norms surrounding PrEP, including injunctive norms (perceived social acceptability of PrEP use) and descriptive norms (perceived commonality of PrEP use), were positively associated with interest in using PrEP. Concerns about HIV infection, recently visiting a health care provider, and comfort discussing PrEP with a provider were also positively associated with interest in using PrEP. Anticipating PrEP disapproval from others was negatively associated with interest in PrEP. Although PrEP can promote autonomy and personal discretion, Black women's PrEP-related decisions occur in a complex social environment. Black women may benefit from interventions to promote positive norms and attitudes surrounding PrEP at the community level and empower them in discussions with their providers about PrEP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Differences in stigma reduction related to injection drug use between people expressing conservative, moderate and progressive values following an online intervention.
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Caruana, Theresa, Brener, Loren, Calabrese, Sarah K., Cama, Elena, Treloar, Carla, and Broady, Timothy
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DRUG abuse ,HARM reduction ,PUBLIC opinion ,SOCIAL stigma ,STREAMING video & television ,SOCIAL values - Abstract
Introduction: Contact interventions have shown short‐term effectiveness in reducing stigmatising attitudes and behaviours of the public towards marginalised population groups, including people who inject drugs. We theorised that the effectiveness of an intervention differs according to peoples' underlying social values and undertook a study to test this. Methods: We recruited participants from the Australian public by social media and measured their attitudes, desire to maintain personal distance, and support for structural stigma towards people who inject drugs before and after a brief online video intervention (n = 314). We divided participants into tertile groups according to their responses to a conservatism scale and compared group differences in post‐intervention stigma scores (n = 242–244), controlling for pre‐intervention scores and demographic variables. Results: Adjusting for baseline levels, the post‐intervention scores in all measures showed significant improvement but scores of the moderate group were consistently most improved. Stigmatising attitudes in the moderate group were significantly reduced when compared with the conservative and progressive groups. However, reductions in desire for personal distance and support for structural stigma did not significantly differ by conservatism group. Discussion and Conclusions: A brief online contact intervention showed immediate effectiveness in reducing stigma towards people who inject drugs. As people with moderate values were found to be more amenable to changing their perspectives, audience social values may need consideration when designing and evaluating stigma interventions. More research is needed to understand how to influence people with more conservative values, and how to increase public support for policies and practices that reduce stigma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Integra® and Matriderm® dermal substitute: could personal medical history and lesion characteristics influence corrective surgery adverse outcome?
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Algeri, Sara, Calabrese, Sarah, and Algeri, Paola
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Background: In literature, there are no guidelines to identify which dermal matrix should be chosen and should be used in different cases. The aim of our study was to evaluate if there are any patient personal characteristics that could influence the success of the corrective surgery with Integra® and Matriderm® dermal matrices and the wound healing process. Methods: We conducted a retrospective analytical single-center clinical study. The sample involves 113 patients treated with dermal matrix positioning surgery from the pool of the Plastic Surgery Department of the “Spedali Civili” of Brescia between January 2015 and March 2021. Our study evaluated the success of treatment, the scarring result, and the type of dermal matrix used, taking into account all the possible influencing factors. Results: Taking into account the type of matrix used, significant differences in diagnosis (p = 0.002) and lesion site (p = 0.029) were found. By means of multivariate analysis, the presence of central nervous system (CNS) pathology appeared to be an independent, statistically significant factor which increased 4 times the risk of surgery failure and 11 times the incidence of non-optimal scarring. In the Integra® group, the presence of chronic diseases incremented the risk of intervention failure by fivefold. CNS diseases resulted independent risk factors respectively for surgery failure (increased risk of 16) and non-optimal scarring (increased risk of 21) in the Matriderm® group. Even with no statistical significance, Integra® and Matriderm® also showed different trends considering diagnosis and site of the lesion treated. Conclusions: Occurrence of complications during wound healing should be prevented and avoided in order to achieve the best result in corrective surgeries. The presence of chronic diseases is an influencing factor for the success of treatment, regardless of the type of dermal substitute used. Pathologies affecting the CNS turned out to be one of the most significant factors considered. Type and lesion sites could also take part in the failure of corrective surgery with dermal matrices and/or non-optimal scarring. Level of evidence: Level III, risk/prognostic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. The Potential Role of Undetectable = Untransmittable (U = U) in Reducing HIV Stigma among Sexual Minority Men in the US.
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Calabrese, Sarah K., Kalwicz, David A., Zaheer, Myra A., Dovidio, John F., Garner, Alex, Zea, Maria Cecilia, Treloar, Carla, Holt, Martin, Smith, Anthony K. J., MacGibbon, James, Modrakovic, Djordje X., Rao, Sharanya, and Eaton, Lisa A.
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HIV infection transmission ,PREVENTION of infectious disease transmission ,MEN'S health ,CROSS-sectional method ,VIRAL load ,SERODIAGNOSIS ,SOCIAL stigma ,SURVEYS ,PREVENTIVE health services ,SEXUAL minorities ,RESEARCH funding ,TEXT messages ,PSYCHOLOGY of HIV-positive persons ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Copyright of AIDS & Behavior is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
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6. The Implications of PrEP Use, Condom Use, and Partner Viral Load Status for Openness to Serodifferent Partnering Among US Sexual Minority Men (SMM).
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Kalwicz, David A., Rao, Sharanya, Modrakovic, Djordje X., Zea, Maria Cecilia, Dovidio, John F., Eaton, Lisa A., Holt, Martin, MacGibbon, James, Zaheer, Myra A., Garner, Alex, and Calabrese, Sarah K.
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HIV infection transmission ,PREVENTION of infectious disease transmission ,HIV prevention ,AMERICAN men ,RESEARCH ,RISK-taking behavior ,ANALYSIS of variance ,VIRAL load ,SELF-evaluation ,HIV seroconversion ,PRE-exposure prophylaxis ,SEXUAL minorities ,REPEATED measures design ,FACTOR analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,CONDOMS ,SEXUAL partners ,STATISTICAL correlation - Abstract
Copyright of AIDS & Behavior is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
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7. Acceptability and Effectiveness of a One-Hour Healthcare Provider Intervention Integrating HIV Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis and Cultural Competence Training.
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Calabrese, Sarah K., Krakower, Douglas S., Rao, Sharanya, Hansen, Nathan B., Mayer, Kenneth H., Magnus, Manya, Bunting, Samuel R., Marcus, Julia L., and Dovidio, John F.
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PILOT projects ,HEALTH services accessibility ,CONFIDENCE ,PRE-exposure prophylaxis ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,CONTINUING medical education ,CULTURAL competence ,INTEGRATED health care delivery ,HEALTH equity ,INTENTION ,HIV ,EDUCATIONAL outcomes ,GROUP process - Abstract
Copyright of AIDS & Behavior is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2023
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8. 'There are people like me who will see that, and it will just wash over them': Black sexual minority men's perspectives on messaging in PrEP visual advertisements.
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Kalwicz, David A., Rao, Sharanya, Modrakovic, Djordje X., Zea, Maria Cecilia, Dovidio, John F., Magnus, Manya, Kharfen, Michael, Patel, Viraj V., and Calabrese, Sarah K.
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SEXUAL minority men ,PRE-exposure prophylaxis ,ADVERTISING ,SEXUAL minorities ,ACCESS to information - Abstract
The high incidence of HIV among US Black sexual minority men is a public health crisis that pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV can help address. Public health campaigns, which often include pictures of Black sexual minority men alongside PrEP-related messaging, have been developed to encourage PrEP awareness and uptake. However, the acceptability of the messaging within these campaigns among Black sexual minority men is unclear. We conducted four focus groups with 18 HIV-negative Black sexual minority men in Washington, DC to explore their perspectives regarding promotional messaging (textual elements) in PrEP visual advertisements, including their reactions to three large-scale public health campaigns. Primary themes included: (1) the need for additional information about PrEP, (2) preference for slogan simplicity, (3) the desire to normalise PrEP use, and (4) mixed views on the inclusion of condoms. Results indicated that the messaging in current PrEP visual advertisements may not sufficiently address Black sexual minority men's questions about PrEP. Providing basic PrEP information and methods to access more information; using simple, unambiguous language; presenting PrEP use in a destigmatising, normalising fashion; and conveying the relevance of condoms if included in the advertisement could help increase the acceptability of future PrEP advertising among Black sexual minority men. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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9. Preexposure Prophylaxis Implementation in a Reproductive Health Setting: Perspectives From Planned Parenthood Providers and Leaders.
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Wilbourn, Brittany, Ogburn, Damon F., Safon, Cara B., Galvao, Rachel W., Kershaw, Trace S., Willie, Tiara C., Taggart, Tamara, Caldwell, Abigail, Kaplan, Clair, Phillips, Nicole, and Calabrese, Sarah K.
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HIV prevention ,FAMILY planning ,HEALTH services administrators ,HEALTH services accessibility ,PROFESSIONS ,HEALTH facility administration ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,ORGANIZATIONAL structure ,WOMEN ,INTERVIEWING ,PARENTHOOD ,PRE-exposure prophylaxis ,HUMAN services programs ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,DECISION making ,COMMUNICATION ,CULTURAL competence ,THEMATIC analysis ,MANAGEMENT ,REPRODUCTIVE health ,CISGENDER people ,HEALTH promotion ,WOMEN'S health services - Abstract
Integrating pregnancy and HIV prevention services would make reproductive health care settings an optimal venue for the promotion and delivery of preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) to cisgender women. However, these settings have been slow to adopt PrEP. Planned parenthood clinicians and leaders possess critical insight that can help accelerate PrEP implementation in reproductive health care settings and elements of the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (i.e., relative priority of the intervention to staff, implementation climate, available resources to implement the intervention, and staff access to knowledge and information about the intervention) can shed light on elements of Planned Parenthood's inner setting that can facilitate PrEP implementation. In this study, individual 60-min interviews were conducted with clinical care team members (n = 10), leadership team members (n = 6), and center managers (n = 2) to explore their perspectives on PrEP implementation and associated training needs. Transcripts were transcribed verbatim and thematically analyzed. Despite having variable PrEP knowledge, participants (100% women, 61% non-Hispanic White) expressed positive attitudes toward implementing PrEP. Barriers and facilitators toward providing PrEP were reported at the structural, provider, and patient levels. Participants desired PrEP training that incorporated culturally competent patient-provider communication. Although participants identified ways that Planned Parenthood uniquely enabled PrEP implementation, barriers must be overcome to optimize promotion and delivery of PrEP to cisgender women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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10. Familiarity with, perceived accuracy of, and willingness to rely on Undetectable=Untransmittable (U=U) among gay and bisexual men in Australia: results of a national cross-sectional survey.
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MacGibbon, James, Bavinton, Benjamin R., Broady, Timothy R., Ellard, Jeanne, Murphy, Dean, Calabrese, Sarah K., Kalwicz, David A., Heath-Paynter, Dash, Molyneux, Angus, Power, Cherie, Heslop, Andrew, de Wit, John, and Holt, Martin
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BISEXUAL men ,GAY men ,SEXUAL minority men ,UNSAFE sex ,HIV prevention - Abstract
Background. The Undetectable=Untransmittable (U=U) message has been promoted since it was demonstrated that viral suppression through HIV treatment prevents sexual transmission between serodiscordant partners (HIV treatment as prevention). Our study assessed familiarity with, perceived accuracy of, and willingness to rely on U=U in a national sample of gay and bisexual men in Australia. Methods. We conducted a national, online cross-sectional survey in April-June 2021. Eligible participants were gay, bisexual and queer men and non-binary people who lived in Australia. Logistic regression was used to identify factors associated with familiarity, perceived accuracy and willingness to rely on U=U (by having condomless sex with a partner with HIV who has an undetectable viral load). Results. Of 1280 participants, most were familiar with U=U (1006/1280; 78.6%), the majority of whom believed U=U was accurate (677/1006; 67.3%). Both familiarity and perceived accuracy were higher among participants living with HIV, followed by pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) users, HIV-negative participants not taking PrEP, and untested/unknown status participants. Knowing at least one person living with HIV, among other factors, was associated with familiarity and perceived accuracy of U=U; and familiarity was associated with perceived accuracy. Among participants familiar with U=U, less than half were willing to rely on U=U (473/1006; 47.0%). Familiarity with U=U and knowing at least one person living with HIV were associated with willingness to rely on U=U, among other factors. Conclusions. We found familiarity with U=U was associated with perceived accuracy and willingness to rely upon it. There is an ongoing need to educate gay and bisexual men (particularly HIV-negative men) about U=U and its benefits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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11. Targeted social marketing of PrEP and the stigmatization of black sexual minority men.
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Calabrese, Sarah K., Kalwicz, David A., Dovidio, John F., Rao, Sharanya, Modrakovic, Djordje X., Boone, Cheriko A., Magnus, Manya, Kharfen, Michael, Patel, Viraj V., and Zea, Maria Cecilia
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SEXUAL minority men ,SOCIAL marketing ,FACTORIAL experiment designs ,CONSPIRACY theories ,COUPLES ,PUBLIC spaces - Abstract
Disparities in HIV incidence and PrEP uptake suggest a need to prioritize Black sexual minority men (SMM) in PrEP social marketing initiatives. However, images linking Black SMM to HIV and PrEP may inadvertently reinforce stigma. We examined HIV-negative/status-unknown Black SMM's responses to targeted PrEP advertisements using mixed methods, including an experiment embedded in a longitudinal online survey (Time 1: n = 96; Time 2 [eight weeks]: n = 73) and four focus groups (n = 18). The full factorial experiment included between-groups and within-subjects comparisons. For between-groups comparisons, each participant was randomly assigned to view one of 12 advertisements, which varied by couple composition (Black SMM couple/Black heterosexual couple/multiple diverse couples/no couples) and campaign (PrEPare for the Possibilities/PlaySure/PrEP4Love). We examined couple composition, campaign, and interaction effects on: advertisement judgments (Time 1), PrEP stigma (Time 1), PrEP motivation (Times 1 and 2), and PrEP behavior (Time 2). For within-subjects comparisons, each participant viewed all 12 advertisements, and we examined couple composition, campaign, and interaction effects on advertisement judgments (Time 2). Focus group participants discussed advertising preferences and responded to the same set of advertisements. For between-groups and within-subjects comparisons, we found significant couple composition effects but no or limited campaign and interaction effects on advertisement judgments. Advertisements featuring Black SMM exclusively were judged as more stigmatizing than advertisements without couples. Advertisements with diverse (vs. no) couples were considered more eye-catching and motivating. There were minimal effects of couple composition and campaign on PrEP stigma, motivation, and behavior. Focus group participants corroborated concerns about the potential for PrEP advertisements to be stigmatizing, suggesting advertisements featuring Black SMM exclusively could be alienating and fuel conspiracy theories. Focus group participants generally favored diverse and less sexualized advertisements, particularly for public spaces. Findings collectively highlight the potential for targeted PrEP advertisements to stigmatize Black SMM and support diverse representation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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12. Accuracy of HIV Risk-Related Information and Inclusion of Undetectable = Untransmittable, Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis, and Post-Exposure Prophylaxis on US Health Department Websites.
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Etami, Yasameen, Zaheer, Myra A., Marcus, Julia L., and Calabrese, Sarah K.
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HIV infection transmission ,HIV prevention ,HEALTH facilities ,DEPARTMENTS ,PUBLIC health ,PRE-exposure prophylaxis ,PREVENTIVE health services ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HEALTH literacy ,HEALTH ,INFORMATION resources ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CONTENT analysis ,WORLD Wide Web - Published
- 2023
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13. Context and Considerations for the Development of Community-Informed Health Communication Messaging to Support Equitable Uptake of COVID-19 Vaccines Among Communities of Color in Washington, DC.
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Kerrigan, Deanna, Mantsios, Andrea, Karver, Tahilin Sanchez, Davis, Wendy, Taggart, Tamara, Calabrese, Sarah K., Mathews, Allison, Robinson, Sullivan, Ruffin, Regretta, Feaster-Bethea, Geri, Quinteros-Grady, Lupi, Galvis, Carmen, Reyes, Rosa, Martinez Chio, Gabriela, Tesfahun, Mesgana, Lane, Ambrose, Peeks, Shanna, Henderson, Kimberly M., and Harris, Kimberly M.
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- 2023
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14. The Role of Social Biases, Race, and Condom Use in Willingness to Prescribe HIV Pre-exposure Prophylaxis to MSM: An Experimental, Vignette-Based Study.
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Bunting, Samuel R., Feinstein, Brian A., Calabrese, Sarah K., Hazra, Aniruddha, Sheth, Neeral K., Wang, Gary, and Garber, Sarah S.
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- 2022
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15. "Let's Be a Person to Person and Have a Genuine Conversation": Comparing Perspectives on PrEP and Sexual Health Communication Between Black Sexual Minority Men and Healthcare Providers.
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Calabrese, Sarah K., Rao, Sharanya, Eldahan, Adam I., Tekeste, Mehrit, Modrakovic, Djordje, Dangaran, D, Boone, Cheriko A., Underhill, Kristen, Krakower, Douglas S., Mayer, Kenneth H., Hansen, Nathan B., Kershaw, Trace S., Magnus, Manya, Betancourt, Joseph R., and Dovidio, John F.
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Patient-provider communication is a key factor affecting HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) awareness and access among Black sexual minority men (SMM). Optimizing patient-provider communication requires a deeper understanding of communication dynamics. In this study, we investigated the perspectives of both HIV-negative/status-unknown Black SMM and practicing community healthcare providers regarding patient-provider communication about PrEP and sexual health. We conducted eleven semi-structured qualitative focus groups (six with Black SMM; five with providers) in the Northeastern USA and thematically analyzed transcripts. A total of 36 Black SMM and 27 providers participated in the focus groups. Our analysis revealed points of alignment and divergence in the two groups' perspectives related to patient-provider communication. Points of alignment included: (1) the importance ascribed to maximizing patients' comfort and (2) belief in patients' right to non-discriminatory healthcare. Points of divergence included: (1) Black SMM's preference for sexual privacy versus providers' preference that patients share sexual information, (2) Black SMM's perception that providers have an ethical responsibility to initiate conversations about PrEP with patients versus providers' perception of such conversations as being optional, and (3) Black SMM's preference for personalized sexual health conversations versus providers' preference for standardized conversations. Findings underscore a need for providers to offer more patient-centered sexual healthcare to Black SMM, which should entail routinely presenting all prevention options available-including PrEP-and inviting open dialogue about sex, while also respecting patients' preferences for privacy about their sexuality. This approach could increase PrEP access and improve equity in the US healthcare system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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16. Evaluating Medical Students’ Views of the Complexity of Sexual Minority Patients and Implications for Care.
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Bunting, Samuel R., Calabrese, Sarah K., Spigner, Sabina T., Goetz, Teddy G., Morrison, Shane D., Zucker, Shana M., Ritchie, Timothy D., Garber, Sarah S., and Batteson, Tamzin J.
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- 2022
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17. Assumptions about patients seeking PrEP: Exploring the effects of patient and sexual partner race and gender identity and the moderating role of implicit racism.
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Bunting, Samuel R., Feinstein, Brian A., Calabrese, Sarah K., Hazra, Aniruddha, Sheth, Neeral K., Chen, Alex F., and Garber, Sarah S.
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GENDER identity ,SEXUAL partners ,RACE identity ,UNSAFE sex ,MEN who have sex with men ,BLACK people - Abstract
Introduction: Daily pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV-prevention is an essential component of national plans to end the HIV epidemic. Despite its well-documented safety and effectiveness, PrEP prescription has not met the public health need. Significant disparities between White and Black people exist with respect to PrEP prescription, as do disparities between men and women. One factor contributing to these disparities is clinicians' assumptions about patients seeking PrEP. Methods: The present study sought to investigate medical students' assumptions about patients seeking PrEP (anticipated increased condomless sex, extra-relational sex, and adherence to PrEP), and assumed HIV risk when presenting with their sexual partner. We systematically varied the race (Black or White) and gender (man or woman) of a fictional patient and their sexual partner. All were in serodifferent relationships including men who have sex with men (MSM), women (MSW), and women who have sex with men (WSM). Participants also completed an implicit association test measuring implicit racism against Black people. We evaluated the moderation effects of patient and partner race on assumptions as well as the moderated moderation effects of implicit racism. Results: A total of 1,472 students participated. For MSM patients, having a Black partner was associated with higher assumed patient non-adherence to PrEP compared to a White partner, however a White partner was associated with higher assumed HIV risk. For MSW patients, a White male patient was viewed as being more likely to engage in more extra-relational sex compared to a Black male patient. For WSM patients, White women were assumed to be more likely to have condomless and extra-relational sex, be nonadherent to PrEP, and were at higher HIV risk. Overall, implicit racism was not related to negative assumptions about Black patients as compared to White patients based on patient/partner race. Discussion: Medical education about PrEP for HIV prevention must ensure future health professionals understand the full range of patients who are at risk for HIV, as well as how implicit racial biases may affect assumptions about patients in serodifferent couples seeking PrEP for HIV prevention. As gatekeepers for PrEP prescription, clinicians' assumptions about patients seeking PrEP represent a barrier to access. Consistent with prior research, we identified minimal effects of race and implicit racism in an experimental setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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18. Preferences for HIV Preexposure Prophylaxis Products Among Black Women in the U.S.
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Irie, Whitney C., Calabrese, Sarah K., Patel, Rupa R., Mayer, Kenneth H., Geng, Elvin H., and Marcus, Julia L.
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PSYCHOLOGY of Black people ,INJECTIONS ,ORAL drug administration ,MEDICAL care costs ,SOCIAL stigma ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,HEALTH literacy ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CONDOMS ,WOMEN'S health - Abstract
In a nationwide sample of Black women in the U.S., we assessed preferences for HIV preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) products, including long-acting injectable (LAI) PrEP and once-daily oral PrEP. Among 315 respondents, 32.1% were aware of PrEP and 40.6% were interested in using it; interest increased to 62.2% if PrEP were provided for free. Oral PrEP was the preferred option (51.1%), followed by LAI PrEP (25.7%), vaginal gel (16.5%), and vaginal ring (6.7%). When examining oral and LAI PrEP alone, most (62.7%) preferred oral PrEP. LAI PrEP was more likely to be preferred among respondents with concerns about healthcare costs or PrEP-related stigma, and among those who reported inconsistent condom use and multiple sexual partners. Although most Black women preferred oral PrEP, LAI PrEP may be appealing to a subset with social and structural barriers to PrEP use, such as cost and stigma, and those at increased risk of HIV infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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19. An Experimental Study of the Effects of Patient Race, Sexual Orientation, and Injection Drug Use on Providers' PrEP-Related Clinical Judgments.
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Calabrese, Sarah K., Kalwicz, David A., Modrakovic, Djordje, Earnshaw, Valerie A., Edelman, E. Jennifer, Bunting, Samuel R., del Río-González, Ana María, Magnus, Manya, Mayer, Kenneth H., Hansen, Nathan B., Kershaw, Trace S., Rosenberger, Joshua G., Krakower, Douglas S., and Dovidio, John F.
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HIV prevention ,SEXUAL orientation ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,RISK-taking behavior ,JUDGMENT (Psychology) ,ACQUISITION of data methodology ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,INTRAVENOUS drug abuse ,RACE ,PREJUDICES ,PRIMARY health care ,MEDICAL records ,DRUG prescribing ,DRUGS ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,DECISION making in clinical medicine ,PHYSICIAN practice patterns ,INTENTION ,PATIENT compliance ,MEN who have sex with men - Abstract
Copyright of AIDS & Behavior is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2022
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20. Optimizing Provider Preexposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) Training: A Cross-Sectional Analysis of Recommendations from Providers Across the PrEP Implementation Cascade.
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Rao, Sharanya, Reed, Ashley E., Parchem, Benjamin, Edelman, E. Jennifer, Magnus, Manya, Hansen, Nathan B., Kershaw, Trace S., Earnshaw, Valerie A., Krakower, Douglas S., Dovidio, John F., Mayer, Kenneth H., Underhill, Kristen, Rosenberger, Joshua G., Ogburn, Damon F., Betancourt, Joseph R., and Calabrese, Sarah K.
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HIV prevention ,HEALTH services accessibility ,MINORITIES ,CONFIDENCE ,CROSS-sectional method ,MANN Whitney U Test ,REGRESSION analysis ,SURVEYS ,HUMAN services programs ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,PSYCHOLOGY of HIV-positive persons ,LATENT structure analysis - Abstract
Expanding PrEP access necessitates training that supports healthcare providers' progression along the PrEP implementation cascade, moving from PrEP awareness to prescription. We surveyed 359 USA providers about PrEP training content and format recommendations. We examined the association between cascade location and training recommendations. Most providers were aware of PrEP (100%), willing to prescribe PrEP (97.2%), had discussed PrEP with patients (92.2%), and had prescribed PrEP (79.9%). Latent class regression analysis revealed that cascade location was associated with training recommendations. Although all providers recommended PrEP-specific content (e.g., patient eligibility), providers who were located further along the cascade also recommended more comprehensive content, including sexual history-taking and sexual and gender minority competence training. Providers further along the cascade were also more likely to recommend interactive training formats (e.g., role-playing). These insights from providers furthest along the cascade indicate the importance of including comprehensive content and interactive formats in future PrEP training initiatives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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21. Changing Knowledge and Attitudes Towards HIV Treatment-as-Prevention and "Undetectable = Untransmittable": A Systematic Review.
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Bor, Jacob, Fischer, Charlie, Modi, Mirva, Richman, Bruce, Kinker, Cameron, King, Rachel, Calabrese, Sarah K., Mokhele, Idah, Sineke, Tembeka, Zuma, Thembelihle, Rosen, Sydney, Bärnighausen, Till, Mayer, Kenneth H., and Onoya, Dorina
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HIV infection transmission ,HIV prevention ,HIV infections ,THERAPEUTICS ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,VIRAL load ,SOCIAL stigma ,MEDICAL screening ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,HEALTH literacy ,PSYCHOLOGY of HIV-positive persons - Abstract
Copyright of AIDS & Behavior is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2021
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22. Perceptions of power and sexual pleasure associated with sexual behaviour profiles among Latino sexual minority men.
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Parchem, Benjamin, Aguayo-Romero, Rodrigo A., del Río-González, Ana María, Calabrese, Sarah K., Poppen, Paul J., and Zea, Maria Cecilia
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HUMAN sexuality ,SEXUAL minority men ,SEXUAL excitement ,SEX education ,ANAL sex ,HISPANIC Americans - Abstract
In a body of research typically focused on risk reduction and disease prevention, other factors motivating the sexual behaviours of Latino sexual minority men, such as resource-based power and sexual pleasure, are less well understood. To this end, Latino immigrant sexual minority men living in New York City were surveyed about their sexual behaviours, perceived power differentials, and pleasure from insertive and receptive anal intercourse. Power and pleasure were examined as associations with behavioural profiles identified through latent class analysis, adjusting for age and partner type. Four latent classes of Latino sexual minority men were identified based on behaviours reported during the most recent sexual event: behaviourally insertive (14.2%), behaviourally versatile (25.9%), behaviourally receptive (29.2%), and limited penetrative behaviour (30.7%). Participants who derived pleasure from insertive and receptive anal intercourse had higher odds of belonging in the behaviourally insertive and behaviourally receptive class, respectively. Perceptions of resource-based power were not associated with class membership. Findings highlight the importance of sexual pleasure as a driver of sexual behaviour, irrespective of power dynamics. Sexual health curricula and interventions for sexual minority men should consider sexual pleasure and sex-affirmative frameworks when providing sexuality education and promoting sexual wellbeing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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23. Electronic Dissemination of a Web-Based Video Promotes PrEP Contemplation and Conversation Among US Women Engaged in Care at Planned Parenthood.
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Calabrese, Sarah K., Lane, Susan B., Caldwell, Abigail, Kaplan, Clair, Dovidio, John F., Galvao, Rachel W., Ogburn, Damon F., Safon, Cara B., Tekeste, Mehrit, Taggart, Tamara, Modrakovic, Djordje, Wilbourn, Brittany C., Blackstock, Oni, and Kershaw, Trace S.
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WOMEN'S health ,FAMILY planning ,CONVERSATION ,MEDICAL care ,PATIENTS ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,VIDEO recording ,WORLD Wide Web ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
We evaluated the acceptability and impact of a web-based PrEP educational video among women (n = 126) by comparing two Planned Parenthood centers: one assigned to a Web Video Condition and one to a Standard Condition. Most women reported the video helped them better understand what PrEP is (92%), how PrEP works (93%), and how to take PrEP (92%). One month post-intervention, more women in the Web Video Condition reported a high level of comfort discussing PrEP with a provider (82% vs. 48%) and commonly thinking about PrEP (36% vs. 4%). No women with linked medical records initiated PrEP during 1-year follow-up. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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24. Where Do Health Professions Students Learn About Pre-exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV Prevention?
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Bunting, Samuel R., Calabrese, Sarah K., Garber, Sarah S., Ritchie, Timothy D., and Batteson, Tamzin J.
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- 2021
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25. Racial and ethnic differences in women's HIV risk and attitudes towards pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) in the context of the substance use, violence, and depression syndemic.
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Willie, Tiara C., Kershaw, Trace S., Blackstock, Oni, Galvao, Rachel W., Safon, Cara B., Tekeste, Mehrit, Ogburn, Damon F., Wilbourn, Brittany, Modrakovic, Djordje, Taggart, Tamara, Kaplan, Clair, Caldwell, Abigail, and Calabrese, Sarah K.
- Subjects
HIV infection risk factors ,BLACK people ,MENTAL depression ,ETHNIC groups ,HEALTH attitudes ,HISPANIC Americans ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,RACE ,RISK-taking behavior ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,VIOLENCE ,WHITE people ,PSYCHOLOGY of women ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,SEXUAL partners - Abstract
Women with syndemic conditions, i.e., two or more co-occurring epidemics, are at elevated risk for HIV acquisition and are therefore prime candidates for pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP). However, PrEP uptake remains low among women, especially among Black and Hispanic women. This study examined associations of syndemic conditions with PrEP attitudes and HIV risk among women, and the moderating effect of race and ethnicity. In 2017, 271 non-Hispanic Black, non-Hispanic White, and Hispanic, PrEP-eligible women engaged in care at Planned Parenthood in the northeastern region of the U.S. completed an online survey. Participants reported syndemic conditions (i.e., intimate partner violence, depression, substance use), PrEP attitudes (e.g., PrEP interest), HIV sexual risk (e.g., multiple male sexual partners), and sociodemographics. Structural equation modeling was used to examine the effects of syndemic conditions on PrEP attitudes and HIV risk, and the moderating effect of race and ethnicity. Women with more syndemic conditions had a higher odds of reporting multiple male sexual partners. Syndemic conditions were positively associated with PrEP attitudes for Hispanic women than non-Hispanic Black and White women. Women with syndemic conditions, particularly Hispanic women, may be receptive to interventions promoting PrEP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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26. Health Profession Students' Awareness, Knowledge, and Confidence Regarding Preexposure Prophylaxis: Results of a National, Multidisciplinary Survey.
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Bunting, Samuel R., Garber, Sarah S., Goldstein, Robert H., Calabrese, Sarah K., Ritchie, Timothy D., and Batteson, Tamzin J.
- Published
- 2021
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27. Understanding, Contextualizing, and Addressing PrEP Stigma to Enhance PrEP Implementation.
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Calabrese, Sarah K.
- Abstract
Purpose of Review: HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is a safe and effective preventive intervention that could play a central role in ending the HIV epidemic. However, low uptake in general, and among certain social groups in particular, underscores the need to identify and address barriers to PrEP use. PrEP stigma has emerged as a key factor interfering with PrEP interest, uptake, and continuation. The purpose of this article is to describe and contextualize PrEP stigma and to offer recommendations on how to address it in future PrEP implementation initiatives. Recent Findings: PrEP users are commonly stereotyped as sexually irresponsible, promiscuous, and immoral. These stereotypes and associated prejudice manifest at multiple levels and discourage PrEP interest and uptake, disrupt PrEP adherence, and motivate PrEP discontinuation. Intersecting forms of stigma may influence the nature, magnitude, and impact of PrEP stigma across social groups and otherwise hinder PrEP use. Current PrEP implementation strategies that narrowly focus on risk and target stigmatized groups with disproportionately high HIV incidence have yielded limited success and are counterproductive to the extent that they perpetuate stigma. Implementation strategies involving more inclusive messaging and further integration of PrEP within healthcare may help to reduce PrEP stigma and mitigate its impact, ultimately increasing PrEP use. Summary: PrEP stigma is a barrier to PrEP interest, uptake, and continuation that manifests at multiple levels. Understanding and addressing PrEP stigma requires consideration of its origins and intersections. Targeted, risk-focused implementation strategies perpetuate stigma and undermine use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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28. Long-term impact of lipofilling in hybrid breast reconstruction: retrospective analysis of two cohorts.
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Calabrese, Sarah, Zingaretti, Nicola, De Francesco, Francesco, Riccio, Michele, De Biasio, Fabrizio, Massarut, Samuele, Almesberger, Daria, and Parodi, Pier Camillo
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MAMMAPLASTY ,MANN Whitney U Test ,BREAST implants ,FISHER exact test ,REOPERATION ,RETROSPECTIVE studies - Abstract
Lipofilling has recently gained popularity as a tool in primary treatment of breast cancer, and its association with two-stage implant breast reconstruction is considered as standard treatment in many centers. However, no data are available about the long-term results of the association of lipofilling in combination with expander-implant reconstruction. A retrospective analysis was conducted on patients treated between January 2010 and December 2014. Two groups were compared. Group 1 had a standard expander-implant two-stage reconstruction. Group 2 underwent hybrid breast reconstruction (HBR). Patient characteristics, hospitalization, outcomes, reoperation details, outpatient visits, and evaluation questionnaires were taken into consideration. Intergroup comparison was performed using Wilcoxon Mann-Whitney U test and Pearson's chi-square test or Fisher's exact test for categorical variables. Two hundred fourteen patients were evaluated: 130 patients in group 1 and 84 patients in group 2. Group 2 showed significant benefits over group 1 in terms of capsular contracture rate, breast pain, and displacement/rotation of the implant (p = 0.005). The HBR protocol is associated with lower rate of capsular contracture, less breast pain at long follow-up times, and lower overall rates of revision surgery compared to standard expander-implant reconstruction. A specific cost analysis will help further clarify the advantages of this protocol over a standard procedure. Level of Evidence: Level III, risk/prognostic, therapeutic study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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29. Contraception as a Potential Gateway to Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis: US Women's Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Modality Preferences Align with Their Birth Control Practices.
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Calabrese, Sarah K., Galvao, Rachel W., Dovidio, John F., Willie, Tiara C., Safon, Cara B., Kaplan, Clair, Caldwell, Abigail, Blackstock, Oni, Phillips, Nicole J., and Kershaw, Trace S.
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HIV prevention ,CONSUMER attitudes ,CONTRACEPTION ,CONTRACEPTIVES ,SEXUAL health ,INJECTIONS ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,ORAL contraceptives ,ORAL drug administration ,REPRODUCTIVE health ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Addressing women's low uptake of HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) requires improved understanding of their product preferences. Such preferences should be contextualized according to other aspects of their reproductive health, including their contraception practices. We investigated women's preferences across 10 PrEP modalities currently available or under study and examined associations between PrEP modality preferences and contraception practices. Heterosexually active women recently engaged in care at Connecticut Planned Parenthood centers (n = 563) completed an online survey. Participants were presented with images and descriptions of 10 PrEP modalities and asked to indicate their preference and specify their reasoning in an open-response format. Participants also reported prior and current use of 16 contraception modalities along with relationship, sexual health, and sociodemographic characteristics. The sample included women ages 18–45 (45.3% 25 or younger) who were predominantly non-Hispanic black (35.7%) or white (33.7%). All PrEP modalities presented were preferred by at least some women, with daily pills (24.9%), injections (24.3%), and invisible implants (14.9%) preferred most commonly. Across all modalities, associated reasoning often centered around ease of use and comfort. Coincidence with contraception modality was the third-most common reason underlying women's preferences. Women currently using the analogous contraception modality versus never having used it had higher odds of preferring PrEP daily pills [adjusted odds ratio (AOR) = 2.03], injections (AOR = 8.45), invisible implants (AOR = 11.63), and vaginal rings (AOR = 8.66). Diversification of available PrEP modalities and prioritization of those coinciding with popular contraception practices—especially daily pills, injections, and implants—could optimize PrEP acceptability, encourage PrEP uptake, and ultimately reduce HIV incidence among women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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30. Intimate Partner Violence Influences Women's Engagement in the Early Stages of the HIV Pre-exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) Care Continuum: Using Doubly Robust Estimation.
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Willie, Tiara C., Keene, Danya E., Stockman, Jamila K., Alexander, Kamila A., Calabrese, Sarah K., and Kershaw, Trace S.
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HIV prevention ,HIV infections & psychology ,PSYCHOLOGY of abused women ,CONTINUUM of care ,LONGITUDINAL method ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,STATISTICS ,DATA analysis ,INTIMATE partner violence - Abstract
Copyright of AIDS & Behavior is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2020
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31. A Cross-Sectional Online Survey of HIV Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Adoption Among Primary Care Physicians.
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Blackstock, Oni, Moore, Brent, Berkenblit, Gail, Calabrese, Sarah, Cunningham, Chinazo, Fiellin, David, Patel, Viraj, Phillips, Karran, Tetrault, Jeanette, Shah, Minesh, Edelman, E., Blackstock, Oni J, Moore, Brent A, Berkenblit, Gail V, Calabrese, Sarah K, Cunningham, Chinazo O, Fiellin, David A, Patel, Viraj V, Phillips, Karran A, and Tetrault, Jeanette M
- Subjects
HIV infections ,THERAPEUTICS ,PRIMARY care ,PHYSICIANS' attitudes ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,PHYSICIAN-patient relations - Abstract
Background: Among health care providers, prescription of HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) has been low. Little is known specifically about primary care physicians (PCPs) with regard to PrEP awareness and adoption (i.e., prescription or referral), and factors associated with adoption.Objective: To assess PrEP awareness, PrEP adoption, and factors associated with adoption among PCPs.Design: Cross-sectional online survey conducted in April and May 2015.Respondents: Members of a national professional organization for academic primary care physicians (n = 266).Main Measures: PrEP awareness, PrEP adoption (ever prescribed or referred a patient for PrEP [yes/no]), provider and practice characteristics, and self-rated knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs associated with adoption.Key Results: The survey response rate was 8.6 % (266/2093). Ninety-three percent of respondents reported prior awareness of PrEP. Of these, 34.9 % reported PrEP adoption. In multivariable analysis of provider and practice characteristics, compared with non-adopters, adopters were more likely to provide care to more than 50 HIV-positive patients (vs. 0, aOR = 6.82, 95 % CI 2.06-22.52). Compared with non-adopters, adopters were also more likely to report excellent, very good, or good self-rated PrEP knowledge (15.1 %, 33.7 %, 30.2 % vs. 2.5 %, 18.1 %, 23.8 %, respectively; p < 0.001) and to perceive PrEP as extremely safe (35.1 % vs. 10.7 %; p = 0.002). Compared with non-adopters, adopters were less likely to perceive PrEP as being moderately likely to increase risk behaviors ("risk compensation") (12.8 % vs. 28.8 %, p = 0.02).Conclusions: While most respondents were aware of PrEP, only one-third of PrEP-aware PCPs reported adoption. Adopters were more likely to have experience providing HIV care and to perceive PrEP as extremely safe, and were less likely to perceive PrEP use as leading to risk compensation. To enhance PCP adoption of PrEP, educational efforts targeting PCPs without HIV care experience should be considered, as well as training those with HIV care experience to be PrEP "clinical champions". Concerns about safety and risk compensation must also be addressed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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32. A Person-Centered Approach to HIV-Related Protective and Risk Factors for Young Black Men Who Have Sex with Men: Implications for Pre-exposure Prophylaxis and HIV Treatment as Prevention.
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Vincent, Wilson, Peterson, John L., Storholm, Erik D., Huebner, David M., Neilands, Torsten B., Calabrese, Sarah K., Rebchook, Gregory M., Tan, Judy Y., Pollack, Lance, and Kegeles, Susan M.
- Subjects
HIV prevention ,HIV infection risk factors ,AGE distribution ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CONDOMS ,HEALTH attitudes ,HEALTH status indicators ,HIV infections ,LATENT structure analysis ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,RISK-taking behavior ,SELF-efficacy ,SOCIAL stigma ,THERAPEUTICS ,PSYCHOLOGY of Black people ,SAFE sex ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,PATIENT-centered care ,MEN who have sex with men ,ATTITUDES toward sex - Abstract
Although young Black men who have sex with men (YBMSM) are disproportionately affected by HIV, they may be more heterogeneous as a group than is typically appreciated. Thus, the present study used a person-centered data-analytic approach to determine profiles of HIV-related risk among YBMSM and whether these profiles could be distinguished by age, HIV status, and socioeconomic risk (i.e., socioeconomic distress). YBMSM (N = 1808) aged 18 to 29 years completed a survey of sociodemographic characteristics, HIV status, and HIV-related behavioral and attitudinal factors (i.e., safer-sex self-efficacy, negative condom attitudes, being in difficult sexual situations, being in difficult sexual relationships, HIV treatment optimism, perceived HIV stigma). Latent profile analysis was used to identify HIV risk profiles and whether age, HIV status, and socioeconomic distress were associated with these profiles. Four profiles emerged: low-, medium-, and high-risk profiles, respectively, and a mixed profile characterized by a tendency to be in difficult sexual situations and relationships while also reporting high safer-sex self-efficacy and low negative attitudes toward condom use. Difficult sexual situations emerged as the key defining indicator of whether a profile reflected higher or lower risk. Younger age, being HIV-positive, and socioeconomic distress were associated with having a higher-risk profile. Given that unique risk profiles emerged that were differentially predicted by sociodemographic characteristics and HIV status, these findings have implications for tailoring interventions to the needs of different subgroups of YBMSM. Also, disempowering or risky sexual situations and relationships among YBMSM must be addressed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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33. US Guideline Criteria for Human Immunodeficiency Virus Preexposure Prophylaxis: Clinical Considerations and Caveats.
- Author
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Calabrese, Sarah K, Krakower, Douglas S, Willie, Tiara C, Kershaw, Trace S, and Mayer, Kenneth H
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HIV prevention ,CONDOMS ,GENDER identity ,HEALTH promotion ,SEXUAL health ,MEDICAL protocols ,MEDICAL practice ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,RISK-taking behavior ,HUMAN sexuality ,PATIENT selection - Abstract
Clinical guidelines for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) developed by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have been instrumental in the implementation of PrEP in medical practices throughout the country. However, the eligibility criteria contained within may inadvertently limit PrEP access for some patients. We describe the following key considerations and caveats related to these criteria: promotion of a selective vs universal approach to sexual health education involving PrEP; misalignment between criteria stated in the table and text boxes; problematic categorization and confounding of sexual orientation, gender identity, and risk behavior; underemphasis of network/community-level drivers of HIV transmission; oversimplification of serodiscordant risk; and lack of clarity surrounding the relevance of condoms to PrEP eligibility. We offer concrete recommendations to address the identified issues and strengthen future iterations of the guidelines, applying these recommendations in an alternative table of "criteria." [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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34. Current US Guidelines for Prescribing HIV Pre-exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) Disqualify Many Women Who Are at Risk and Motivated to Use PrEP.
- Author
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Calabrese, Sarah K., Willie, Tiara C., Galvao, Rachel W., Tekeste, Mehrit, Dovidio, John F., Safon, Cara B., Blackstock, Oni, Taggart, Tamara, Kaplan, Clair, Caldwell, Abigail, and Kershaw, Trace S.
- Published
- 2019
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35. Differences in Medical Mistrust Between Black and White Women: Implications for Patient–Provider Communication About PrEP.
- Author
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Tekeste, Mehrit, Calabrese, Sarah K., Hull, Shawnika, Taggart, Tamara, Dovidio, John F., Safon, Cara B., Kershaw, Trace S., Blackstock, Oni, Kaplan, Clair, Caldwell, Abigail, and Lane, Susan B.
- Subjects
HIV prevention ,COMMUNICATION ,HEALTH attitudes ,HEALTH services accessibility ,INTENTION ,PATIENT-professional relations ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,RACE ,SURVEYS ,WHITE people ,PSYCHOLOGY of women ,PSYCHOLOGY of Black people ,CROSS-sectional method ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is an effective biomedical HIV prevention method. PrEP uptake has been persistently low among US women, particularly Black women, who account for 61% of new HIV diagnoses among women. Further understanding of barriers to Black women accessing PrEP is needed. This 2017 cross-sectional survey study explored race-based differences in PrEP interest and intention among women and the indirect association between race and comfort discussing PrEP with a healthcare provider through medical mistrust. The sample consisted of 501 adult women (241 Black; 260 White) who were HIV-negative, PrEP-inexperienced, and heterosexually active. Black women reported greater PrEP interest and intention than White women. However, Black women expressed higher levels of medical mistrust, which, in turn, was associated with lower comfort discussing PrEP with a provider. Medical mistrust may operate as a unique barrier to PrEP access among Black women who are interested in and could benefit from PrEP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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36. Social Networks and Its Impact on Women's Awareness, Interest, and Uptake of HIV Pre-exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP): Implications for Women Experiencing Intimate Partner Violence.
- Author
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Willie, Tiara C., Stockman, Jamila K., Keene, Danya E., Calabrese, Sarah K., Alexander, Kamila A., and Kershaw, Trace S.
- Published
- 2019
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37. Considering Stigma in the Provision of HIV Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis: Reflections from Current Prescribers.
- Author
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Calabrese, Sarah K., Tekeste, Mehrit, Underhill, Kristen, Hansen, Nathan B., Betancourt, Joseph R., Dovidio, John F., Mayer, Kenneth H., Krakower, Douglas S., Magnus, Manya, Kershaw, Trace S., Eldahan, Adam I., and Gaston Hawkins, Lauren A.
- Subjects
HIV prevention ,AGE distribution ,HEALTH attitudes ,HEALTH services accessibility ,INTERVIEWING ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,PHYSICIAN-patient relations ,PREJUDICES ,HUMAN sexuality ,STEREOTYPES ,SOCIAL stigma ,VALUES (Ethics) ,DECISION making in clinical medicine ,QUALITATIVE research ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,THEMATIC analysis ,UNSAFE sex ,HEALTH literacy ,PHYSICIANS' attitudes ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Efforts to identify and address social inequities in HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) access are urgently needed. We investigated early-adopting PrEP prescribers' beliefs about how stigma contributes to PrEP access disparities in health care and explored potential intervention strategies within the context of PrEP service delivery. US-based PrEP prescribers were recruited through professional networks and participant referrals. Qualitative interviews were conducted, transcribed, and thematically analyzed. Participants (n = 18) were primarily male (72%); white (39%) or Asian (33%); and heterosexual (56%). Most practiced in the Northeastern (67%) or Southern (22%) United States; were physicians (94%); and specialized in HIV/infectious disease (89%). Participants described multiple forms of structural and interpersonal stigma impeding PrEP access. The requirement that PrEP be prescribed was a perceived deterrent for populations with medical mistrust and/or low health literacy. Practice norms such as discussing PrEP only in response to patient requests were seen as favoring more privileged groups. When probed about personally held biases, age-related stereotypes were the most readily acknowledged, including assumptions about older adults being sexually inactive and uncomfortable discussing sex. Participants criticized providers who chose not to prescribe PrEP within their clinical practice, particularly those whose decision reflected personal values related to condomless sex or discomfort communicating about sex with their patients. Suggested solutions included standardizing PrEP service delivery across patients and increasing cultural competence training. These early insights from a select sample of early-adopting providers illuminate mechanisms through which stigma could compromise PrEP access for key populations and corresponding points of intervention within the health care system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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38. Stigma impedes HIV prevention by stifling patient–provider communication about U = U.
- Author
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Calabrese, Sarah K and Mayer, Kenneth H
- Subjects
HIV prevention ,SOCIAL stigma ,MEDICAL standards ,COUPLES therapy - Abstract
Stigma impedes HIV prevention by stifling patient-provider communication about U = U Keywords: ARV; stigma; viral suppression; undetectable=untransmittable; provider EN ARV stigma viral suppression undetectable=untransmittable provider 1 3 3 07/30/20 20200701 NES 200701 The success of HIV control strategies throughout the world depends on stakeholders' implementation of the latest advancements in HIV science. Establishing universal U = U patient education in normative guidelines, incorporating U = U into clinical education for all HIV service providers, facilitating patient-provider conversations about U = U with concrete tools, and broadening public awareness through public health messaging could all promote positive change. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2020
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39. Temporal Fluctuations in Behavior, Perceived HIV Risk, and Willingness to Use Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP).
- Author
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Underhill, Kristen, Guthrie, Kate M., Colleran, Christopher, Calabrese, Sarah K., Operario, Don, and Mayer, Kenneth H.
- Subjects
HIV infection risk factors ,MEN who have sex with men ,MALE sex workers ,PRE-exposure prophylaxis ,SEX work - Abstract
Individual perceptions of HIV risk influence willingness to use pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV prevention. Among men who have sex with men (MSM) and male sex workers (MSWs), temporal or episodic changes in risk behavior may influence perceived risk and PrEP acceptability over time. We investigated fluctuations in perceived HIV risk and PrEP acceptability, comparing MSWs against MSM who do not engage in sex work. We conducted 8 focus groups (n = 38) and 56 individual interviews among MSM and MSWs in Providence, RI. Perceived HIV risk shaped willingness to use PrEP among both MSWs and MSM who did not engage in sex work, and risk perceptions changed over time depending on behavior. For MSWs, perceived risk cycled according to patterns of substance use and sex work activity. These cycles yielded an "access-interest paradox": an inverse relationship between willingness to use and ability to access PrEP. MSM who did not engage in sex work also reported temporal shifts in risk behavior, perceived risk, and willingness to use PrEP, but changes were unrelated to access. MSM attributed fluctuations to seasonal changes, vacations, partnerships, behavioral "phases," and episodic alcohol or drug use. Efforts to implement PrEP among MSM and street-based MSWs should address temporal changes in willingness to use PrEP, which are linked to perceived risk. Among MSWs, confronting the access-interest paradox may require intensive outreach during high-risk times and efforts to address low perceived risk during times of reduced sex work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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40. HIV Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Stigma as a Multidimensional Barrier to Uptake Among Women Who Attend Planned Parenthood.
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Calabrese, Sarah K., Dovidio, John F., Tekeste, Mehrit, Taggart,, Tamara, Galvao, Rachel W., Safon, Cara B., Willie, Tiara C., Caldwell, Abigail, Kaplan, Clair, and Kershaw, Trace S.
- Published
- 2018
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41. Prevention paradox: Medical students are less inclined to prescribe HIV pre‐exposure prophylaxis for patients in highest need.
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Calabrese, Sarah K., Earnshaw, Valerie A., Underhill, Kristen, Krakower, Douglas S., Magnus, Manya, Hansen, Nathan B., Mayer, Kenneth H., Betancourt, Joseph R., Kershaw, Trace S., and Dovidio, John F.
- Subjects
PREVENTIVE medicine ,HIV prevention ,HIV ,HIV-positive persons ,DRUG prescribing ,HIV infections ,MEDICAL students - Abstract
Abstract: Introduction: Despite healthcare providers’ growing awareness of pre‐exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), prescription rates remain low. PrEP is an efficacious HIV prevention strategy recommended for use with condoms but still protective in their absence. Concern about the impact of PrEP on condom use and other risk behaviour is, nonetheless, among the barriers to prescription commonly reported. To understand the implications of this concern for PrEP access, we examined how medical students’ willingness to prescribe PrEP varied by patients’ condom use and partnering practices. We also assessed the perceived acceptability of various reasons for condom discontinuation with PrEP. Methods: An online survey was distributed to 854 medical students in the Northeastern US in 2015. Participants (n = 111) were surveyed about their willingness to prescribe PrEP for each of six male patients who systematically differed in their reported condom use (sustained use, sustained nonuse, or discontinuation with PrEP) and partnering practices (single male partner with untreated HIV or multiple male partners of unknown HIV status). Participants also reported perceived acceptability of four reasons for condom discontinuation: pleasure, sexual functioning, intimacy, and conception. Results: Willingness to prescribe PrEP was inconsistent with patient risk: When the patient used condoms and planned to sustain condom use, most participants were willing to prescribe PrEP – 93% if the patient had a single partner and 86% if the patient had multiple partners. Fewer were willing to prescribe if the patient did not use condoms and planned to sustain nonuse (53% and 45%, respectively) or used condoms but planned to discontinue use (27% and 28%). Significantly fewer participants were willing to prescribe for a patient with multiple partners versus a single partner when the patient reported sustained condom use or sustained condom nonuse. The number of participants who were willing to prescribe was similarly low for a patient with multiple partners versus a single partner when the patient reported that he planned to discontinue condom use. More participants accepted a patient discontinuing condoms for conception (69%) than for intimacy (23%), pleasure (14%), or sexual functioning (13%). Conclusion: Medical students’ clinical judgments were misaligned with patient risk and suggest misconceptions or personal values may undermine provision of optimal HIV prevention services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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42. A Closer Look at Racism and Heterosexism in Medical Students’ Clinical Decision-Making Related to HIV Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP): Implications for PrEP Education.
- Author
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Calabrese, Sarah K., Earnshaw, Valerie A., Krakower, Douglas S., Underhill, Kristen, Vincent, Wilson, Magnus, Manya, Hansen, Nathan B., Kershaw, Trace S., Mayer, Kenneth H., Betancourt, Joseph R., and Dovidio, John F.
- Subjects
HIV prevention ,CONDOMS ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH status indicators ,HELP-seeking behavior ,HETEROSEXUALITY ,CASE studies ,PSYCHOLOGY of medical students ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,PATIENT compliance ,RACISM ,RISK-taking behavior ,SURVEYS ,DECISION making in clinical medicine ,MEN who have sex with men - Abstract
Social biases among healthcare providers could limit PrEP access. In this survey study of 115 US medical students, we examined associations between biases (racism and heterosexism) and PrEP clinical decision-making and explored prior PrEP education as a potential buffer. After viewing a vignette about a PrEP-seeking MSM patient, participants reported anticipated patient behavior (condomless sex, extra-relational sex, and adherence), intention to prescribe PrEP to the patient, biases, and background characteristics. Minimal evidence for racism affecting clinical decision-making emerged. In unadjusted analyses, heterosexism indirectly affected prescribing intention via all anticipated behaviors, tested as parallel mediators. Participants expressing greater heterosexism more strongly anticipated increased risk behavior and adherence problems, which were associated with lower prescribing intention. The indirect effect via condomless sex remained significant adjusting for background characteristics. Prior PrEP education did not buffer any indirect effects. Heterosexism may compromise PrEP provision to MSM and should be addressed in PrEP-related medical education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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43. Sexual Stereotypes Ascribed to Black Men Who Have Sex with Men: An Intersectional Analysis.
- Author
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Calabrese, Sarah K., Earnshaw, Valerie A., Magnus, Manya, Hansen, Nathan B., Krakower, Douglas S., Underhill, Kristen, Mayer, Kenneth H., Kershaw, Trace S., Betancourt, Joseph R., and Dovidio, John F.
- Subjects
GENDER stereotypes ,MEN who have sex with men ,AFRICAN American gay men ,SEXUAL orientation ,HETEROSEXUAL men ,WHITE gay men ,SEXUAL diversity ,INTERSECTIONALITY ,HEALTH ,PSYCHOLOGY of Black people ,HETEROSEXUALITY ,RACISM ,RESEARCH ,BLACK people ,RESEARCH methodology ,EVALUATION research ,MEDICAL cooperation ,HOMOSEXUALITY ,STEREOTYPES ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,COMPARATIVE studies ,SEXUAL partners ,WHITE people ,UNSAFE sex - Abstract
Sexual stereotypes may adversely affect the health of Black men who have sex with men (MSM). Greater understanding of the nature and nuances of these stereotypes is needed. This online, survey-based study used an inductive, intersectional approach to characterize the sexual stereotypes ascribed to Black MSM by the U.S. general public, their distinctiveness from those ascribed to Black men and MSM in general, and their relative prototypicality as compared to dominant subgroups. Members of the public, recruited in 2014-2015, were randomly assigned to survey conditions that varied systematically by race (Black, White, or unspecified) and sexual orientation (gay, heterosexual, or unspecified) of a designated social group. Participants (n = 285) reported stereotypes of their assigned group that they perceived to exist in U.S. culture in an open-response format. Cross-condition comparisons revealed that, overall, Black gay male stereotypes were non-prototypical of Black men or gay men. Rather, stereotypes of Black men were more similar to Black heterosexual men and stereotypes of gay men were more similar to White gay men. Nonetheless, 11 of the 15 most frequently reported Black gay male stereotypes overlapped with stereotypes of Black men (e.g., large penis), gay men (e.g., deviant), or both (e.g., promiscuous). Four stereotypes were unique relative to both Black men and gay men: down low, diseased, loud, and dirty. Findings suggest that Black MSM face multiple derogatory sexual stereotypes, several of which are group-specific. These stereotypes are consistent with cultural (mis)representations of Black MSM and suggest a need for more accurate portrayals of existing sexual diversity within this group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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44. Integrating HIV Preexposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) Into Routine Preventive Health Care to Avoid Exacerbating Disparities.
- Author
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Calabrese, Sarah K., Krakower, Douglas S., and Mayer, Kenneth H.
- Subjects
PRE-exposure prophylaxis ,HIV prevention ,HEALTH equity ,PREVENTIVE health services ,SOCIAL marginality ,HEALTH & social status ,PUBLIC health ,EPIDEMICS ,HISTORY ,TWENTY-first century ,PREVENTION ,THERAPEUTICS ,HISTORY of public health ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH status indicators ,PREVENTIVE medicine - Abstract
More than 3 decades since its emergence in the United States, HIV continues to spread and disproportionately affect socially marginalized groups. Preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP), a highly effective prevention strategy federally approved since 2012, could fundamentally alter the course of the epidemic. However, PrEP’s potential has not been fully realized, in part because health care providers have been slow to adopt PrEP in clinical practice and have been selective in their discussion of PrEP with patients. This nonstandardized approach has constrained PrEP access. PrEP access has not only been inadequate but also inequitable, with several groups in high need showing lower rates of uptake than do their socially privileged counterparts. Recognizing these early warning signs that current approaches to PrEP implementation could exacerbate existing HIV disparities, we call on health professionals to integrate PrEP into routine preventive health care for adult patients—particularly in primary care, reproductive health, and behavioral health settings. Drawing on the empirical literature, we present 4 arguments for why doing so would improve access and access equity, and we conclude that the benefits clearly outweigh the challenges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. HIV Preexposure Prophylaxis and Condomless Sex: Disentangling Personal Values From Public Health Priorities.
- Author
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Calabrese, Sarah K., Underhill, Kristen, and Mayer, Kenneth H.
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PRE-exposure prophylaxis ,CONDOM use ,SAFE sex in AIDS prevention ,HIV prevention ,VALUES (Ethics) - Abstract
Daily HIV preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is an effective form of HIV protection that remains unknown and inaccessible for many people in the United States despite receiving federal approval over five years ago. PrEP is supported by the public health community, but forgoing condoms while taking PrEP has proven controversial; this controversy may be contributing to the lag in PrEP uptake. We argue that limiting PrEP access based on anticipated or actual sexual behavior contradicts the goals of public health research and practice and is not scientifically justified. As evidence for the effectiveness of novel forms of biomedical HIV protection emerges, public health professionals need to accept new definitions of "protected sex" and ensure that their personal values do not override empirical evidence when determining public health priorities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
46. HIV-related shame and health-related quality of life among older, HIV-positive adults.
- Author
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Vincent, Wilson, Fang, Xindi, Calabrese, Sarah, Heckman, Timothy, Sikkema, Kathleen, and Hansen, Nathan
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MENTAL depression ,PSYCHOLOGY of HIV-positive persons ,LONELINESS ,QUALITY of life ,SHAME ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling - Abstract
This study investigated how HIV-related shame is associated with health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in older people living with HIV (PLHIV). Structural equation modeling tested whether HIV-related shame was associated with three dimensions of HRQoL (physical, emotional, and social well-being) and whether there were significant indirect associations of HIV-related shame with the three HRQoL dimensions via depression and loneliness in a sample of 299 PLHIV ≥50 years old. Results showed that depression and loneliness were key mechanisms, with depression at least partially accounting for the association between HIV-related shame and both emotional and physical well-being, respectively, and loneliness accounting for the association between HIV-related shame and social well-being. HIV-related shame appears to be an important correlate of HRQoL in older PLHIV and may provide a promising leveraging point by which to improve HRQoL in older PLHIV. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
- Full Text
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47. 'Support Your Client at the Space That They're in': HIV Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) Prescribers' Perspectives on PrEP-Related Risk Compensation.
- Author
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Calabrese, Sarah K., Magnus, Manya, Mayer, Kenneth H., Krakower, Douglas S., Eldahan, Adam I., Hawkins, Lauren A. Gaston, Underhill, Kristen, Hansen, Nathan B., Kershaw, Trace S., Betancourt, Joseph R., and Dovidio, John F.
- Subjects
HIV prevention ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL prescriptions ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,PHYSICIANS ,RISK-taking behavior ,QUALITATIVE research ,THEMATIC analysis ,PHYSICIANS' attitudes - Abstract
Despite the demonstrated effectiveness of HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) and evidence that most PrEP users do not engage in risk compensation (i.e., increased risk behavior due to a perceived decrease in HIV susceptibility), some healthcare providers report patient risk compensation to be a deterrent to prescribing PrEP. Overcoming this barrier is essential to supporting PrEP access and uptake among people at risk for HIV. To inform such efforts, this qualitative study explored PrEP-related risk compensation attitudes among providers with firsthand experience prescribing PrEP. US-based PrEP providers ( n = 18), most of whom were HIV specialists, were recruited through direct outreach and referral from colleagues and other participants. Individual 90-min semistructured interviews were conducted by phone or in person from September 2014 through February 2015, transcribed, and thematically analyzed. Three attitudinal themes emerged: (1) providers' role is to support patients in making informed decisions, (2) risk behavior while taking PrEP does not fully offset PrEP's protective benefit (i.e., PrEP confers net protection, even with added behavioral risk), and (3) PrEP-related risk compensation is unduly stigmatized within and beyond the healthcare community. Participants were critical of other healthcare providers' negative judgment of patients and reluctance to prescribe PrEP due to anticipated risk compensation. Several providers also acknowledged an evolution in their thinking from initial ambivalence toward greater acceptance of PrEP and PrEP-related behavior change. PrEP providers' insights about risk compensation may help to address unsubstantiated concerns about PrEP-related risk compensation and challenge the acceptability of withholding PrEP on these grounds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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48. Primary Care Physicians' Willingness to Prescribe HIV Pre-exposure Prophylaxis for People who Inject Drugs.
- Author
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Edelman, E., Moore, Brent, Calabrese, Sarah, Berkenblit, Gail, Cunningham, Chinazo, Patel, Viraj, Phillips, Karran, Tetrault, Jeanette, Shah, Minesh, Fiellin, David, and Blackstock, Oni
- Subjects
HIV prevention ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,MEDICAL prescriptions ,MEDICAL practice ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,GENERAL practitioners ,PRIMARY health care ,PROBABILITY theory ,SURVEYS ,INTRAVENOUS drug abusers ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Copyright of AIDS & Behavior is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2017
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49. Explaining the Efficacy of Pre-exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV Prevention: A Qualitative Study of Message Framing and Messaging Preferences Among US Men Who have Sex with Men.
- Author
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Underhill, Kristen, Morrow, Kathleen, Colleran, Christopher, Calabrese, Sarah, Operario, Don, Salovey, Peter, and Mayer, Kenneth
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HIV prevention ,HEALTH attitudes ,HEALTH promotion ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,UNCERTAINTY ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,MEN who have sex with men - Abstract
We investigated message comprehension and message framing preferences for communicating about PrEP efficacy with US MSM. We conducted eight focus groups (n = 38) and n = 56 individual interviews with MSM in Providence, RI. Facilitators probed comprehension, credibility, and acceptability of efficacy messages, including percentages, non-numerical paraphrases, efficacy ranges versus point estimates, and success- versus failure-framed messages. Our findings indicated a range of comprehension and operational understandings of efficacy messages. Participants tended to prefer percentage-based and success-framed messages, although preferences varied for communicating about efficacy using a single percentage versus a range. Participants reported uncertainty about how to interpret numerical estimates, and many questioned whether trial results would predict personal effectiveness. These results suggest that providers and researchers implementing PrEP may face challenges in communicating with users about efficacy. Efforts to educate MSM about PrEP should incorporate percentage-based information, and message framing decisions may influence message credibility and overall PrEP acceptability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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50. Framing HIV Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) for the General Public: How Inclusive Messaging May Prevent Prejudice from Diminishing Public Support.
- Author
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Calabrese, Sarah, Underhill, Kristen, Earnshaw, Valerie, Hansen, Nathan, Kershaw, Trace, Magnus, Manya, Krakower, Douglas, Mayer, Kenneth, Betancourt, Joseph, and Dovidio, John
- Subjects
HIV prevention ,PREJUDICES ,BLACK people ,GAY men ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,PUBLIC opinion ,RACISM ,MEN who have sex with men ,ATTITUDES toward sex ,PREVENTION - Abstract
Strategic framing of public messages about HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) may influence public support for policies and programs affecting access. This survey study examined how public attitudes toward PrEP differed based on the social group PrEP was described as benefiting ('beneficiary') and the moderating effect of prejudice. Members of the general public ( n = 154) recruited online were randomly assigned to three beneficiary conditions: general population, gay men, or Black gay men. All participants received identical PrEP background information before completing measures of PrEP attitudes (specifying beneficiary), racism, and heterosexism. Despite anticipating greater PrEP adherence among gay men and Black gay men and perceiving PrEP as especially beneficial to the latter, participants expressed lower support for policies/programs making PrEP affordable for these groups vs. the general population. This disparity in support was stronger among participants reporting greater prejudice. Inclusive framing of PrEP in public discourse may prevent prejudice from undermining implementation efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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