Bridging HIV prevention and sexual reproductive health services in the context of multi-method PrEP: a qualitative study exploring provider perceptions in South Africa
Faith Mary Musvipwa, Siphokazi Dada, Fatima Abegail Cholo, Melanie Pleaner, Mosa Julia Letsielo, Sean Arries, Alison Kutywayo, Catherine Elizabeth Martin, Saiqa Mullick

TL;DR
This study explores how healthcare providers in South Africa view the integration of HIV prevention and sexual reproductive health services, especially with new PrEP methods.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into provider perceptions of integrating multi-method PrEP with SRH services in real-world settings.
Findings
HCPs reported benefits like increased continuity of care and higher uptake of SRH services.
Facilitators included integrated education and flexible appointment scheduling.
Challenges included misaligned visit schedules and infrastructural limitations in public health facilities.
Abstract
The introduction of new pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) methods presents an opportunity to expand choice and better integrate HIV prevention and broader sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services. Integrating HIV prevention services, including PrEP, and SRH services presents an opportunity to improve healthcare access and outcomes. However, implementation within real-world healthcare settings requires an understanding of both enablers and barriers from the perspective of healthcare providers (HCPs). A qualitative descriptive study was conducted using in-depth interviews (IDIs) to describe the integration of PrEP and SRH services, drawing on the perspectives of HCPs. Thirty-four HCPs were purposively sampled and interviewed between October and November 2024 across four South African locations: eThekwini, Gqeberha, Mthatha, and Tshwane. Audio recordings were transcribed, translated,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health · Reproductive tract infections research
