Barriers and facilitators to HIV testing among African and Caribbean heritage communities: a mixed methods study.

IF 2.9 3区 医学 Q2 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Temilola Adeniyi, Jeremy Horwood, Marsha Doran, Khabo Piggott, Aisha-Monic Namurach, Lindsey Harryman, Emmy Oldenbourg, Miryam Kiflu, Nathan Speare, Mary Griffin, Matthew Wilson, Mark Febrache, Rachel Allbless, David Dravie-John, Joanna Copping, Frank De Vocht, Scott Walter, Fiona Fox
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objectives: African and Caribbean heritage (ACH) communities in the UK face disproportionately high rates of HIV and often experience delayed diagnoses, worsening health inequities. Increasing HIV testing in these communities is essential to address these disparities and support the UK's HIV reduction targets. This study examines barriers and facilitators to HIV testing among Bristol's ACH community, a high-prevalence area with significant rates of late diagnoses, filling a critical gap in context-specific data.

Methods: Using a mixed-methods approach, this study combined 29 in-depth interviews and 41 online surveys, capturing ACH community members' views on HIV stigma, healthcare trust and testing experiences. Data were thematically analysed and mapped to the Social Ecological Model (SEM) framework, with community researchers conducting data collection and analysis to enhance participants' engagement and trust and contribute to a deeper contextual analytical understanding.

Results: Findings highlight significant barriers across SEM levels: individual-level knowledge gaps and stigma, interpersonal confidentiality concerns within tight knit communities, community-level taboos and distrust and organisational barriers, such as discriminatory healthcare experiences. Effective facilitators included culturally specific services, flexible testing options, community-driven outreach and increased healthcare representation, all of which fostered greater trust and engagement in testing.

Conclusion: The study underscores the importance of culturally aligned interventions, including representation within and training in cultural competence for healthcare providers and community co-production in service design. Implementing such strategies could reduce late diagnoses and support the normalisation of routine HIV testing in ACH communities, ultimately contributing to health equity. Future research should explore gender and age-specific barriers, while assessing the long-term impact of community-led interventions to inform national HIV policy and public health strategies for marginalised communities in the UK.

非洲和加勒比传统社区艾滋病毒检测的障碍和促进因素:一项混合方法研究。
目标:英国的非洲和加勒比遗产(ACH)社区面临着不成比例的高艾滋病毒感染率,并且经常经历延迟诊断,加剧了卫生不平等。在这些社区增加艾滋病毒检测对于解决这些差异和支持英国的艾滋病毒减少目标至关重要。本研究考察了布里斯托尔ACH社区中HIV检测的障碍和促进因素,这是一个高患病率地区,晚期诊断率很高,填补了具体情况数据的关键空白。方法:本研究采用混合方法,结合29次深度访谈和41次在线调查,了解ACH社区成员对艾滋病污名、医疗信任和检测经验的看法。数据按主题进行分析,并映射到社会生态模型(SEM)框架,由社区研究人员进行数据收集和分析,以提高参与者的参与度和信任,并有助于更深层次的背景分析理解。结果:研究结果突出了跨扫描电镜层面的重大障碍:个人层面的知识差距和耻辱,紧密联系的社区内的人际保密问题,社区层面的禁忌和不信任以及组织障碍,如歧视性的医疗保健经历。有效的促进因素包括特定文化的服务、灵活的检测选择、社区驱动的外联和增加的医疗保健代表,所有这些都促进了对检测的更大信任和参与。结论:该研究强调了文化协调干预的重要性,包括医疗保健提供者的文化能力的表现和培训,以及服务设计中的社区合作。实施这些战略可以减少晚期诊断,并支持ACH社区常规艾滋病毒检测的正常化,最终促进卫生公平。未来的研究应该探索性别和年龄特定的障碍,同时评估社区主导的干预措施的长期影响,为英国边缘化社区的国家艾滋病毒政策和公共卫生战略提供信息。
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来源期刊
Sexually Transmitted Infections
Sexually Transmitted Infections 医学-传染病学
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
8.30%
发文量
96
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Sexually Transmitted Infections is the world’s longest running international journal on sexual health. It aims to keep practitioners, trainees and researchers up to date in the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of all STIs and HIV. The journal publishes original research, descriptive epidemiology, evidence-based reviews and comment on the clinical, public health, sociological and laboratory aspects of sexual health from around the world. We also publish educational articles, letters and other material of interest to readers, along with podcasts and other online material. STI provides a high quality editorial service from submission to publication.
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