Abstract

BackgroundHIV Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is an underutilized intervention to prevent HIV infection in Canada. Known barriers to PrEP uptake include lack of awareness, low HIV risk perception, side effects, PrEP not being publicly funded (which is the case in Ontario) and stigma. We aimed to identify barriers to PrEP use and actions that may facilitate PrEP uptake in Ontario and British Columbia.MethodsGay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men 19 years or older living in Ontario and British Columbia, Canada, answered a survey between July 2019 and August 2020. Participants who met Canadian PrEP guideline criteria for PrEP and not already using PrEP indicated which barriers were relevant to them and which actions would make them more likely to start PrEP. We used descriptive statistics and tested differences between Ontario and British Columbia using Chi-square tests for proportions and t-tests or Wilcoxon rank-sum tests for continuous variables. ResultsOf 1527 survey responses, 260 (184 in Ontario and 76 in British Columbia) who were never PrEP users and met criteria for PrEP were included. In Ontario, the most common barriers were affordability (43%) and concern about side effects (42%). In British Columbia, the most common reasons were concern about side effects (41%) and not feeling at high enough risk (36%). In Ontario, the actions that would most likely encourage the respondent to start PrEP were short waiting time (63%), the healthcare provider informing about their HIV risk being higher than perceived (62%) and a written step-by-step guide (60%). In British Columbia, the actions that would most likely encourage the respondent to start PrEP were short waiting time (68%), people speaking publicly about PrEP (68%) and their healthcare provider counselling about: their HIV risk being higher than perceived (64%), side effects of PrEP (64%) and about how PrEP works (62%).Table. Top reasons for not using PrEP and top actions that might influence the decision to start PrEP stratified by province. (n= 184 in Ontario, n= 76 in British Columbia). ConclusionConcern about side effects and not feeling at high enough risk were common barriers. Short waiting times may increase PrEP uptake. In Ontario, the findings suggested lack of affordability. In British Columbia, actions involving healthcare providers were valued.Disclosures Kevin Woodward, MD FRCPC, Gilead (Independent Contractor) Darrell Tan, MD PhD, Abbvie (Grant/Research Support)Gilead (Grant/Research Support)GlaxoSmithKline (Scientific Research Study Investigator)ViiV Healthcare (Grant/Research Support)

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call