Getting to Implementation for HIV Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (GTI-PrEP): A data-driven approach to PrEP prescribing.

Shari S Rogal, Brittney Neely, Monica Merante, Karen Slazinski, Lorenzo McFarland, Christina Brodkorb, Jada Cooper, Carolyn Lamorte, Sandra Gibson, Emily Comstock, Jamie Morano, Marissa Maier, Lauren A Beste, Karine Rozenberg, Maggie Chartier, Matthew J Chinman, David Ross, Vera Yakovchenko
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Abstract

Background: Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) dramatically reduces the likelihood of acquiring human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), yet it remains under-prescribed, particularly for people in communities with high HIV incidence. While implementation science and health services researchers aim to address disparities in care, few interventions have proven effective in doing so. We aimed to identify implementation strategies associated with higher PrEP prescribing rates and pilot test a tailored intervention as a proof-of-concept in a single Veterans Health Administration (VA) facility.

Methods: VA clinicians were surveyed using an instrument derived from the Evidence-based Recommendations for Implementing Change taxonomy to assess the use of various strategies for PrEP in fiscal years 2019-2021. Correlational analyses identified the strategies associated with the frequency of PrEP prescribing and semi-structured interviews with personnel from 11 VA medical facilities with high PrEP prescribing refined and manualized these strategies into the Getting to Implementation (GTI)-PrEP playbook. The playbook was subsequently pilot tested in a VA facility with high new HIV diagnosis rates and low PrEP prescribing rates.

Results: The clinician survey collected 157 responses from 95 unique VA facilities on implementation strategy use. Analysis identified eight strategies significantly associated with PrEP prescribing, including: networking, clinician education, clinical support tools, dashboard utilization, telehealth, pharmacist involvement, direct patient engagement, and enhanced sexual health history taking. In the pilot study, the site completed the GTI-PrEP Playbook with high fidelity and newly implemented seven of the eight strategies, achieving a 363% increase in PrEP prescribing rates among Black Veterans over the one-year period.

Conclusions: This multi-year national evaluation identified a core subset of effective implementation strategies for increasing PrEP prescribing. The process of empirically specifying these strategies and pilot testing them through the GTI-PrEP playbook demonstrates a promising, data-driven approach to improve PrEP prescribing rates and reduce racial disparities in HIV prevention.

实施艾滋病毒暴露前预防(GTI-PrEP):数据驱动的PrEP处方方法。
背景:暴露前预防(PrEP)显著降低了感染人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)的可能性,但处方仍然不足,特别是对艾滋病毒高发病率社区的人群。虽然实施科学和卫生服务研究人员的目标是解决护理方面的差异,但事实证明,很少有干预措施在这方面是有效的。我们的目的是确定与更高的PrEP处方率相关的实施策略,并在单个退伍军人健康管理局(VA)设施中试点测试量身定制的干预措施作为概念验证。方法:使用基于证据的实施变革分类建议衍生的工具对VA临床医生进行调查,以评估2019-2021财政年度PrEP各种策略的使用情况。相关分析确定了与PrEP处方频率相关的策略,并对来自11家高PrEP处方的VA医疗机构的人员进行了半结构化访谈,将这些策略提炼并手工化为实施策略(GTI)-PrEP剧本。该手册随后在VA设施进行了试点测试,该设施的新艾滋病毒诊断率高,PrEP处方率低。结果:临床医生调查收集了来自95家独特的VA设施的157份关于实施策略使用的反馈。分析确定了八种与PrEP处方显著相关的策略,包括:网络、临床医生教育、临床支持工具、仪表板利用、远程医疗、药剂师参与、患者直接参与和加强性健康病史记录。在试点研究中,该网站以高保真度完成了GTI-PrEP剧本,并新实施了八项策略中的七项,使黑人退伍军人的PrEP处方率在一年内增加了363%。结论:这项多年的国家评估确定了增加PrEP处方的有效实施战略的核心子集。通过GTI-PrEP手册对这些策略进行经验说明和试点测试的过程表明,这是一种有希望的、数据驱动的方法,可以提高PrEP处方率,减少艾滋病毒预防方面的种族差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
4.20
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