P-2061. Beyond Distance: Social Barriers Influence Long-acting Antiretrovirals Location Preference Among People with HIV in Rural Areas
Emmanuel Nazaire Essam Nkodo, Renae Furl, Elizabeth Lyden, Dan Cramer, Jennifer O’Neill, Maureen Kubat, Heather Saarela, Titilola Labisi, Nada Fadul

TL;DR
People with HIV in rural areas prefer where they receive long-acting antiretrovirals based on social factors like stigma and travel time.
Contribution
This study identifies social determinants of health influencing location preferences for long-acting antiretrovirals in rural HIV populations.
Findings
44% of rural HIV patients prefer receiving long-acting antiretrovirals locally rather than traveling to a specialty clinic.
Privacy concerns and 'small town gossip' were cited as reasons for avoiding local treatment in rural areas.
Travel time and feeling emotionally safe at home were strongly associated with preferring local treatment.
Abstract
People with HIV (PWH) living in rural and remote areas are disproportionately impacted by social and structural barriers such as stigma, poverty, and transportation issues. While long-acting injectable antiretrovirals (LAI ART) have the potential to improve adherence, they can exacerbate barriers by increasing travel burden to clinics (monthly or every 2 months). Our study aimed to investigate location preference for LAI ART in PWH living remotely from the clinic and factors associated with preference.Cohort Characteristics associated with preference to receive Cabenuva local vs travel to SCCMeasures of social determinants of health and association with preference to receive Cabenuva local vs travel to SCC Cohort Characteristics associated with preference to receive Cabenuva local vs travel to SCC Measures of social determinants of health and association with preference to receive…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · HIV, Drug Use, Sexual Risk · HIV/AIDS Impact and Responses
