Litcius/Paper detail

HIV PrEP Clinician Communication Preferences Among Black Sexual Minority Men

Derek T. Dangerfield, Alexander Lipson, Janeane N. Anderson

2022AIDS Education and Prevention17 citationsDOI

Abstract

Black sexual minority men (BSMM) are substantially less likely than White SMM to accept a clinician's recommendation to initiate HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP). The purpose of this study is to identify PrEP messaging preferences among BSMM. Data were obtained from 12 focus groups and one in-depth interview among BSMM in Baltimore, MD (N = 39). Focus groups were stratified (18-24, 25-34, and 35 and older), and facilitators probed on ways clinicians could discuss PrEP with BSMM. An adapted pile sorting approach was used to identify themes. Most identified as homosexual, gay, or same-gender-loving (68%), were employed (69%), and single (66%). Thematic analysis revealed that BSMM wanted clinicians to explain PrEP efficacy and side effects, tailor messaging, provide prevention messaging with care, and disclose PrEP use. Clinicians could increase uptake and adherence among BSMM by implementing PrEP communication preferences. Discussing PrEP efficacy and safety is also necessary. When possible, clinicians should disclose PrEP use history to build trust.

Topics & Concepts

Pre-exposure prophylaxisFocus groupMedicineFamily medicineThematic analysisHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV)Men who have sex with menHomosexualityQualitative researchPsychologyClinical psychologyBusinessPsychoanalysisSociologySocial scienceMarketingSyphilisHIV/AIDS Research and InterventionsHIV, Drug Use, Sexual RiskLGBTQ Health, Identity, and Policy