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Uptake of a patient-centred dynamic choice model for HIV prevention in rural Kenya and Uganda: SEARCH SAPPHIRE study.

Authors :
Kabami, Jane
Kabami, Jane
Kakande, Elijah
Chamie, Gabriel
Balzer, Laura B
Petersen, Maya L
Camlin, Carol S
Nyabuti, Marilyn
Koss, Catherine A
Bukusi, Elizabeth A
Kamya, Moses R
Havlir, Diane V
Ayieko, James
Kabami, Jane
Kabami, Jane
Kakande, Elijah
Chamie, Gabriel
Balzer, Laura B
Petersen, Maya L
Camlin, Carol S
Nyabuti, Marilyn
Koss, Catherine A
Bukusi, Elizabeth A
Kamya, Moses R
Havlir, Diane V
Ayieko, James
Source :
Journal of the International AIDS Society; vol 26 Suppl 1, iss Suppl 1, e26121; 1758-2652
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

IntroductionPerson-centred HIV prevention delivery models that offer structured choices in product, testing and visit location may increase coverage. However, data are lacking on the actual uptake of choices among persons at risk of HIV in southern Africa. In an ongoing randomized study (SEARCH; NCT04810650) in rural East Africa, we evaluated the uptake of choices made when offered in a person-centred, dynamic choice model for HIV prevention.MethodsUsing the PRECEDE framework, we developed a persont-centred, Dynamic Choice HIV Prevention (DCP) intervention for persons at risk of HIV in three settings in rural Kenya and Uganda: antenatal clinic (ANC), outpatient department (OPD) and in the community. Components include: provider training on product choice (predisposing); flexibility and responsiveness to client desires and choices (pre-exposure prophylaxis [PrEP]/post-exposure prophylaxis [PEP], clinic vs. off-site visits and self- or clinician-based HIV testing) (enabling); and client and staff feedback (reinforcing). All clients received a structured assessment of barriers with personalized plans to address them, mobile phone access to clinicians (24 hours/7 days/week) and integrated reproductive health services. In this interim analysis, we describe the uptake of choices of product, location and testing during the first 24 weeks of follow-up (April 2021-March 2022).ResultsA total of 612 (203 ANC, 197 OPD and 212 community) participants were randomized to the person-centred DCP intervention. We delivered the DCP intervention in all three settings with diverse populations: ANC: 39% pregnant; median age: 24 years; OPD: 39% male, median age 27 years; and community: 42% male, median age: 29 years. Baseline choice of PrEP was highest in ANC (98%) vs. OPD (84%) and community (40%); whereas the proportion of adults selecting PEP was higher in the community (46%) vs. OPD (8%) and ANC (1%). Personal preference for off-site visits increased over time (65% at week 24 vs. 35%

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Journal of the International AIDS Society; vol 26 Suppl 1, iss Suppl 1, e26121; 1758-2652
Notes :
application/pdf, Journal of the International AIDS Society vol 26 Suppl 1, iss Suppl 1, e26121 1758-2652
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1393990117
Document Type :
Electronic Resource