Determinants of knowledge and positive perception of HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis: the role of age and sexual orientation in patients of specialized STI and transgender health services
Paula Knoch Mendonça Gil, Danilo dos Santos Conrado, Ana Isabel do Nascimento, João Cesar Pereira da Cunha, Gabriel Serrano Ramires Koch, Camila Guadeluppe Maciel, Cláudia Du Bocage Santos-Pinto, Everton Falcão de Oliveira

TL;DR
This study explores how age and sexual orientation influence knowledge and perception of HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) among patients in specialized health services.
Contribution
The study identifies sociodemographic factors, particularly age and sexual orientation, as key determinants of PrEP knowledge and perception.
Findings
Limited PrEP knowledge was a major gap among participants.
Younger users showed a more favorable perception of PrEP.
Most participants were young, heterosexual, non-white men with higher education.
Abstract
Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is one of strategies for preventing human immunodeficiency virus infection. However, limited knowledge and perception of PrEP may impact the access to this prophylaxis. This study aimed to assess knowledge and perceptions of PrEP and to identify determinants, both sociodemographic and structural, associated with them among users of specialized public health services. This is a cross-sectional study based on data obtained through interviews conducted with patients who sought specialized services in STI on a spontaneous basis, as well as with routine patients at an outpatient clinic for transgender healthcare. A total of 142 users of the Brazilian Unified Health System services were interviewed. Eligible participants were individuals aged ≥ 18 years who sought care at the recruitment sites, were not currently using PrEP, and self-reported no prior HIV…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · Sex work and related issues · HIV, Drug Use, Sexual Risk
