‘We go where we know’: Reflections from Mobilizing for PrEP and Sexual Health (MobPrESH) – A peer-led PrEP education programme across England, for and by women and non-binary people

IF 2.7 Q2 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY
P. Grenfell, Sabrina Rafael, J. Calliste, W. Nutland
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

Background: Pre-exposure prophylaxis is a highly effective method of HIV prevention but few women know about it, have access to it, or see it as relevant to them. In 2019, grassroots organization PrEPster piloted a peer-led intervention, MobPrESH (Mobilizing for Pre-Exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) and Sexual Health), across three sites in England, to mobilize for PrEP and sexual health with communities of women and non-binary people most affected by HIV, including Black women and non-binary people, people of colour, migrants, and transgender (trans) women. Objectives: We aimed to explore the accessibility, feasibility, acceptability, and ‘fidelity’ of MobPrESH, from the perspectives of peer mobilizers and project staff. Methods: We conducted focus group discussions and qualitative interviews with nine peer mobilizers (most identified as Black cisgender (cis) women) and six project staff (including Black and white cis women and non-binary people). We analysed data thematically, iteratively, and inductively, informed by concepts of reproductive and social justice. Results: We present findings in five thematic areas: connecting and relating to situate sexual health discussions, navigating silence and stigma, connecting within and across communities, competing pressures and structural hostilities, and resources and continuity. Community knowledge-building about PrEP is a slow, iterative process that needs investment and creation of trusted spaces that centre communities’ needs and concerns. Peer mobilizers and the communities they engaged with had competing demands in their lives, and knowledge-raising about PrEP was impacted by intersecting stigmas, discrimination, and oppressions around HIV status, racism, misogyny, transphobia, homophobia, and anti-sex worker rhetoric. Conclusions: Peer-led PrEP interventions require funding and foregrounding, particularly for women and non-binary people who are Black, trans, migrants, and people of colour, situated relative to their wider health needs, life pressures, and priorities. This requires concurrent challenge of the racist and patriarchal structures that continue to obscure the sexual and reproductive health needs of racially minoritized and marginalized women and non-binary people.
“我们去我们知道的地方”:动员预防措施和性健康的反思(MobPrESH)——一个由同龄人主导的英格兰预防措施教育项目,为妇女和非二元性人群服务
背景:暴露前预防是一种非常有效的艾滋病毒预防方法,但很少有妇女了解它,能够获得它,或认为它与她们有关。2019年,草根组织PrEPster在英格兰的三个地点试行了一项同伴主导的干预措施MobPrESH(动员进行暴露前预防(PrEP)和性健康),以动员受艾滋病毒影响最严重的妇女和非二元人群社区的PrEP和性健康,包括黑人妇女和非二元人群、有色人种、移民和变性(跨性别)妇女。目的:我们旨在从同行动员者和项目人员的角度探讨MobPrESH的可访问性、可行性、可接受性和“保真度”。方法:我们对9名同伴动员者(大多数为黑人顺性女性)和6名项目工作人员(包括黑人和白人顺性女性以及非二元性别者)进行了焦点小组讨论和定性访谈。我们分析数据主题,迭代,归纳,由生殖和社会正义的概念通知。结果:我们在五个主题领域提出了研究结果:连接和相关情境性健康讨论,导航沉默和耻辱,社区内部和社区之间的联系,竞争压力和结构性敌对,以及资源和连续性。关于预防PrEP的社区知识建设是一个缓慢而反复的过程,需要投资和创造以社区需求和关切为中心的可信空间。同伴动员者和他们参与的社区在他们的生活中有相互竞争的需求,关于预防措施的知识提高受到围绕艾滋病毒状况、种族主义、厌女症、跨性别恐惧症、同性恋恐惧症和反性工作者言论的交叉污名、歧视和压迫的影响。结论:同伴主导的PrEP干预措施需要资金和前景,特别是对于妇女和黑人、跨性别者、移民和有色人种等非二元人群,相对于他们更广泛的健康需求、生活压力和优先事项。这需要同时挑战种族主义和父权制结构,这些结构继续掩盖在种族上处于少数地位和边缘地位的妇女和非二元性别者的性健康和生殖健康需要。
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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来源期刊
Womens Health
Womens Health OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY-
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
4.20%
发文量
0
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊介绍: For many diseases, women’s physiology and life-cycle hormonal changes demand important consideration when determining healthcare management options. Age- and gender-related factors can directly affect treatment outcomes, and differences between the clinical management of, say, an adolescent female and that in a pre- or postmenopausal patient may be either subtle or profound. At the same time, there are certain conditions that are far more prevalent in women than men, and these may require special attention. Furthermore, in an increasingly aged population in which women demonstrate a greater life-expectancy.
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