调查提供者沟通和语言重构对非洲和加勒比黑人妇女艾滋病毒暴露前预防(PrEP)参与的影响:一项系统评价。

IF 1.2 4区 医学 Q4 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES
Maksida Sabackic, Ayeshah Emon, Pamela Menzies-Banton, Renee West
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引用次数: 0

摘要

患者-提供者参与艾滋病毒暴露前预防(PrEP)的情况仍然存在显著差异,特别是在非洲黑人和加勒比地区(BAC)妇女中。在英国,顺性女性占2022年艾滋病毒诊断的三分之一,其中64.1%的病例发生在BAC女性中,这突显了在公平获得PrEP信息和服务方面的严重差距。本系统综述探讨了卫生服务提供者层面的沟通障碍和促进因素对BAC妇女PrEP接受和参与的影响。在四个数据库中进行了全面的搜索,得出了31项符合条件的研究,检查了提供者与BAC妇女关于PrEP的沟通。专题分析确定了两个关键领域:提供者沟通在PrEP参与中的作用和重新构建语言的重要性。障碍包括有限的提供者发起的对话,对妇女PrEP的医学知识不足,以及由种族偏见和耻辱驱动的医疗不信任。促进因素包括文化敏感、非评判性的沟通方法,以及围绕PrEP的语言的战略重构,将其作为一种赋权工具,而不仅仅是降低风险。这些发现强调了改进提供者沟通策略的必要性,并支持采用更具包容性和肯定性的对话,以促进BAC妇女公平参与PrEP,她们仍然不成比例地被排除在目前的PrEP叙述之外。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Investigating the influence of provider communication and language reframing on HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) engagement with Black African and Caribbean women: a systematic review.

Patient-provider engagement with HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) continues to exhibit significant disparities, particularly among Black African and Caribbean (BAC) women. In the United Kingdom, cisgender women accounted for one-third of HIV diagnoses in 2022, with 64.1% of these cases occurring among BAC women, underscoring a critical gap in equitable access to PrEP information and services. This systematic review explored health service provider-level communication barriers and facilitators influencing PrEP uptake and engagement with BAC women. A comprehensive search across four databases yielded 31 eligible studies examining provider communication about PrEP with BAC women. Thematic analysis identified two key areas: the role of provider communication in PrEP engagement and the importance of reframing language. Barriers included limited provider-initiated conversations, insufficient medical knowledge about PrEP for women, and medical mistrust driven by racial bias and stigma. Facilitators included culturally sensitive, nonjudgmental communication approaches and the strategic reframing of the language surrounding PrEP as a tool for empowerment rather than solely risk reduction. These findings highlight the need for improved provider communication strategies and support the adoption of more inclusive and affirming dialogue to foster equitable PrEP engagement among BAC women, who remain disproportionately excluded from current PrEP narratives.

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CiteScore
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