Abstract

We evaluated a 2-way short message service (SMS) communication platform to improve continuation of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV prevention among Kenyan women who initiated PrEP within routine maternal child health (MCH) and family planning clinics. We adapted an existing SMS platform (Mobile WACh [mWACh]) to send PrEP-tailored, theory-based SMS and allow clients to communicate with a remote nurse. Women who did not have HIV and who were initiating PrEP at 2 MCH/family planning clinics in Kisumu County, Kenya, from February to October 2018, were offered enrollment into the mWACh-PrEP program; SMS communication was free. We evaluated acceptability, satisfaction, and implementation metrics. In a pre/postevaluation, we compared PrEP continuation at 1-month postinitiation among women who initiated PrEP in the period before (n=166) versus after mWACh-PrEP implementation, adjusting for baseline differences. Of the 334 women who were screened for enrollment into the mWACh-PrEP program; 193 (58%) were eligible and of those, 190 (98%) accepted enrollment. Reasons for ineligibility (n=141) included no phone access (29%) and shared SIM cards (25%). Median age was 25 years (interquartile range=22-30), and 91% were MCH clients. Compared to women who initiated PrEP in the month before mWACh-PrEP implementation, women who enrolled in mWACh-PrEP were more likely to return for their first PrEP follow-up visit (40% vs. 53%; adjusted risk ratio [aRR]=1.26; 95% confidence interval [CI]= 1.06, 1.50; P=.008) and more likely to continue PrEP (22% vs. 43%; aRR=1.75; 95% CI=1.21, 2.55; P=.003). Among those who returned, 99% reported successful receipt of SMS through the mWACh-PrEP system and 94% reported that mWACh-PrEP helped them understand PrEP better. Concerns about PrEP use, how it works, and side effects accounted for the majority (80%) of issues raised by participants using SMS. Two-way SMS expanded support for PrEP and opportunities for dialogue beyond the clinic and enabled women to ask and receive answers in real time regarding PrEP, which facilitated its continued use.

Highlights

  • We evaluated a 2-way short message service (SMS) communication platform to improve continuation of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV prevention among Kenyan women who initiated PrEP within routine maternal child health (MCH) and family planning clinics

  • The remaining 20% of unprompted questions and concerns sent by participants and answered by nurses were not PrEP-related. These messages included concerns regarding HIV risk (3%), queries regarding MCH or family planning issues in general (4%), and other topics like allergic reactions to other medications or relationship concerns (13%). In this mixed-methods evaluation of an Mobile health (mHealth) tool within a programmatic PrEP delivery setting, we found very high acceptance (98%) among the subset of women who met inclusion criteria, an almost 2-fold greater early PrEP continuation, and higher self-reported adherence among women who were enrolled in Mobile WACh (mWACh)-PrEP than those who initiated PrEP before mWACh-PrEP implementation

  • This indicated that many women who initiated PrEP left the clinic with concerns about PrEP use or that PrEP concerns may have arisen after they left the clinic that would otherwise go unaddressed without access to a remote nurse

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Summary

Introduction

We evaluated a 2-way short message service (SMS) communication platform to improve continuation of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV prevention among Kenyan women who initiated PrEP within routine maternal child health (MCH) and family planning clinics. Using SMS Communication May Increase Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Continuation and Adherence www.ghspjournal.org transmission, the World Health Organization recommends offering oral tenofovir-based preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) to pregnant women who do not have HIV in high-burden settings.[6]. Data from Kenya estimated that HIV incidence among pregnant and postpartum women is 2.31/100 person-years.[7] Programmatic PrEP delivery to pregnant and postpartum women in maternal child health (MCH) clinics is ongoing in Kenya,[8,9] and other countries are planning PrEP implementation within MCH settings

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