View clinical trials related to PrEP Uptake.
Filter by:This study will evaluate implementation strategies to address barriers and increase uptake of PrEP among Black cisgender women in Planned Parenthood of Illinois (PPIL) health centers.
The purpose of this study is to develop a chatbot intervention to promote PrEP awareness and uptake among Black men who have sex with men (MSM) in the Southern United States.
Black women experience one of the highest incidences of HIV among all subpopulations in the United States, but pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) use among Black cisgender women is very limited. The investigators will implement four strategies (provider training, patient education, EMR optimization, and PrEP navigation) at 12 community health clinics in the Midwest and South. The investigators predict that PrEP use and other related outcomes will improve for participants after the intervention period.
The investigators broadly aim at determining barriers and facilitators to PrEP uptake and adherence and retention among the study participants. The investigators have the following specific objectives of determining: (1) the PrEP knowledge levels, attitudes, practices, and user experiences among injecting and sexual partners of PWID in Nairobi County (2) the socio-demographic, behavioural, and structural factors hindering the uptake of PrEP among PWID's sexual and injecting partners in Nairobi County; and (3) the effect of a theory-guided behavioural intervention (PrEP-UP) utilizing peer outreach and navigation on the uptake of PrEP by the study participants. The investigators hypothesize that: PWID's injecting and sexual partners in Nairobi City lack PrEP knowledge, and have poor attitudes practices, and user experiences about PrEP; less than 50.0% of the PWID's sexual and injecting partners in Nairobi County have socio-demographic, behavioural and structural factors hindering their uptake of PrEP; and a theory-guided behavioural intervention (PrEP-UP) utilizing peer outreach and navigation has no effect on the uptake of PrEP by the study participants.
Gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men (MSM) are the group at highest risk of HIV infection in the United States. Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) has demonstrated high efficacy in preventing HIV infection among MSM. However, uptake in clinical settings has been slow for several reasons, including low awareness and education, low perceived HIV risk, concern for side-effects, and stigma associated with taking the medication. The purpose of the proposed study is to develop and evaluate a brief motivational interviewing (MI) intervention to promote PrEP uptake among MSM during the course of routine HIV screening at a public sexually transmitted disease (STD) clinic.
The purpose of this study is to test the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of E-PrEP on reaching young men of color who have sex with men (YMCSM) at high-risk of HIV infection to reduce HIV acquisition. E-PrEP is a peer-designed social media-based health intervention to increase PrEP awareness, knowledge, and motivation as a tool for HIV prevention and to increase linkage to primary care.
Pepped on PrEP is an innovative pilot RCT designed by an interdisciplinary team to develop a counseling and problem-solving PrEP adherence intervention with a Behavioral Activation (BA) approach that aims to re-engage participants in safe but pleasurable activities in life and addresses stimulant-abuse as well as associated factors including depression, as barriers to optimal PrEP adherence.
This study is a controlled, un-blinded, two-arm, randomized (1:1) clinical trial to determine if providing high-risk subjects with a calculated risk score changes the likelihood of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) uptake.