Understanding issues around use of oral pre exposure prophylaxis among female sex workers in India

Abstract Background Empowering female sex workers (FSWs) through women controlled HIV prevention option has been in focus globally. FSWs are important target for oral pre exposure prophylaxis (PrEP). A multi-centric qualitative study was conducted to explore the FSWs’ willingness to use oral PrEP in...

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Main Authors: Seema Sahay, Archana Verma, Suhas Shewale, Sampada Bangar, Athokpam Bijeshkumar, Mubashir Angolkar, Thilakavathi Subramanian, Nomita Chandhiok
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-09-01
Series:BMC Infectious Diseases
Subjects:
FSW
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-021-06612-8
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spelling doaj-864ca3af71774fa39f7dd136c41e1c7a2021-09-12T12:05:31ZengBMCBMC Infectious Diseases1471-23342021-09-0121111510.1186/s12879-021-06612-8Understanding issues around use of oral pre exposure prophylaxis among female sex workers in IndiaSeema Sahay0Archana Verma1Suhas Shewale2Sampada Bangar3Athokpam Bijeshkumar4Mubashir Angolkar5Thilakavathi Subramanian6Nomita Chandhiok7Division of Social and Behavioral Research, ICMR-National AIDS Research InstituteDivision of Social and Behavioral Research, ICMR-National AIDS Research InstituteDivision of Social and Behavioral Research, ICMR-National AIDS Research InstituteDivision of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, ICMR-National AIDS Research InstituteDivision of Social and Behavioral Research, ICMR-National AIDS Research InstituteDepartment of Public Health, Jawaharlal Nehru Medical College, KLE UniversityDivision of Social and Behavioral Research, ICMR-National Institute of EpidemiologyDivision of Reproductive and Child Health, Indian Council of Medical ResearchAbstract Background Empowering female sex workers (FSWs) through women controlled HIV prevention option has been in focus globally. FSWs are important target for oral pre exposure prophylaxis (PrEP). A multi-centric qualitative study was conducted to explore the FSWs’ willingness to use oral PrEP in India. Methods Seventy three interviews and 02 focus group discussions were conducted at 3 high HIV prevalent states in India during 2013–14. Study explored issues around willingness to use oral PrEP. The study was approved by the respective institutional ethics committee of the study sites. Thematic analysis using grounded theory approach was used to analyze the data in N-VIVO version 8.0. Results Thematic analysis showed events of forced condom-less sex. FSWs believed that oral PrEP could provide independence, financial gains, and privacy and therefore hoped to use it as an alternative to male condom. However, any impact on physical/ aesthetic attributes and reproductive system were not acceptable and could become a barrier. Provider initiated oral PrEP was not preferred. Providers voiced safety monitoring concerns. Adherence emerged as a challenge because of: (1) alcohol use; (2) taking PrEP tablet each day being boring; (3) Stigma because Oral PrEP is ARV based. Alcohol use and dread of repetitive dose brings forth the need for long acting oral PrEP. Conclusion Oral PrEP is acceptable among FSWs; it should be rolled out alongside strong messages on STI protection and PrEP as compliment to condoms. PrEP roll out requires educating communities about HIV treatment versus prevention. Long-acting oral PrEP could address both ‘boredom’ and alcoholism and sustain adherence.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-021-06612-8FSWOral PrEPIndiaQualitative researchViolenceStigma
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Seema Sahay
Archana Verma
Suhas Shewale
Sampada Bangar
Athokpam Bijeshkumar
Mubashir Angolkar
Thilakavathi Subramanian
Nomita Chandhiok
spellingShingle Seema Sahay
Archana Verma
Suhas Shewale
Sampada Bangar
Athokpam Bijeshkumar
Mubashir Angolkar
Thilakavathi Subramanian
Nomita Chandhiok
Understanding issues around use of oral pre exposure prophylaxis among female sex workers in India
BMC Infectious Diseases
FSW
Oral PrEP
India
Qualitative research
Violence
Stigma
author_facet Seema Sahay
Archana Verma
Suhas Shewale
Sampada Bangar
Athokpam Bijeshkumar
Mubashir Angolkar
Thilakavathi Subramanian
Nomita Chandhiok
author_sort Seema Sahay
title Understanding issues around use of oral pre exposure prophylaxis among female sex workers in India
title_short Understanding issues around use of oral pre exposure prophylaxis among female sex workers in India
title_full Understanding issues around use of oral pre exposure prophylaxis among female sex workers in India
title_fullStr Understanding issues around use of oral pre exposure prophylaxis among female sex workers in India
title_full_unstemmed Understanding issues around use of oral pre exposure prophylaxis among female sex workers in India
title_sort understanding issues around use of oral pre exposure prophylaxis among female sex workers in india
publisher BMC
series BMC Infectious Diseases
issn 1471-2334
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Abstract Background Empowering female sex workers (FSWs) through women controlled HIV prevention option has been in focus globally. FSWs are important target for oral pre exposure prophylaxis (PrEP). A multi-centric qualitative study was conducted to explore the FSWs’ willingness to use oral PrEP in India. Methods Seventy three interviews and 02 focus group discussions were conducted at 3 high HIV prevalent states in India during 2013–14. Study explored issues around willingness to use oral PrEP. The study was approved by the respective institutional ethics committee of the study sites. Thematic analysis using grounded theory approach was used to analyze the data in N-VIVO version 8.0. Results Thematic analysis showed events of forced condom-less sex. FSWs believed that oral PrEP could provide independence, financial gains, and privacy and therefore hoped to use it as an alternative to male condom. However, any impact on physical/ aesthetic attributes and reproductive system were not acceptable and could become a barrier. Provider initiated oral PrEP was not preferred. Providers voiced safety monitoring concerns. Adherence emerged as a challenge because of: (1) alcohol use; (2) taking PrEP tablet each day being boring; (3) Stigma because Oral PrEP is ARV based. Alcohol use and dread of repetitive dose brings forth the need for long acting oral PrEP. Conclusion Oral PrEP is acceptable among FSWs; it should be rolled out alongside strong messages on STI protection and PrEP as compliment to condoms. PrEP roll out requires educating communities about HIV treatment versus prevention. Long-acting oral PrEP could address both ‘boredom’ and alcoholism and sustain adherence.
topic FSW
Oral PrEP
India
Qualitative research
Violence
Stigma
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-021-06612-8
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