Abstract
Oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV-negative individuals at high risk was introduced in Lesotho in April 2016. To assess the feasibility and acceptability of PrEP in Lesotho and to study the attitudes and beliefs around HIV risk and prevention measures among young women, between September and December 2016 we asked 302 female university students at fourteen higher education institutions in Lesotho about their sexual behavior, experiences of sexual coercion and abuse, HIV risk perception, willingness to use PrEP, as well as their attitudes toward condom use and self-administration of daily medications. Overall, 57.3% of the sample reported perceiving themselves at risk of acquiring HIV and 32.1% reported being strongly willing to use PrEP if it were available in their community. In a multivariate mediation analysis, perceived HIV risk was associated with 11.5 percentage points increase in likelihood of using PrEP (p = 0.041). Multiple concurrent sexual partnership was associated with 16.1 percentage points increase in likelihood of self-perceived HIV risk (p = 0.007), while having sexual partners in polygamous relationships was associated with 17.8 percentage points increase in likelihood of self-perceived HIV risk (p = 0.002) and the mediated indirect effect accounted for 18.2% of its total effect. Those who reported strong adherence to antibiotics were 23.1 percentage points more likely to express willingness to use PrEP than those who did not (p = 0.004), and those who reported to dislike condoms were 19.1 percentage points more likely to be willing to use PrEP than those who did not report aversion to condom use: these effect were direct and not mediated by HIV risk perception. Intimate partner violence (IPV) in the network of peers was also directly associated with willingness to use PrEP and its effect was not significantly mediated by HIV risk perception: those who had friends who experienced intimate partner violence were 14.9 percentage points more likely to be willing to use PrEP than those who did not report IPV in their network of peers (p = 0.009). These findings support the inclusion of individuals with multiple concurrent sexual partners among the key populations for PrEP provision and confirm that willingness to use PrEP is not solely driven by HIV risk perception. They also indicate that the presence of IPV in peer networks is related to one’s willingness to use PrEP. PrEP service provision may generate synergies with IPV prevention programs when offered within this framework.
Highlights
In April 2016, the Government of Lesotho’s Ministry of Health (MoH) released new guidelines on the use of antiretroviral therapy for HIV prevention and treatment
To estimate the mediation model, we drew from Baron and Kenny [22] methodology: first, we ran a model with HIV risk perception as the outcome, and we ran a model with willingness to use pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) as the outcome, including HIV risk perception and all the other covariates
Perceived HIV risk was significantly associated with difficulty in negotiating condom use (p = 0.014), intimate partner violence (IPV) in the network of peers (p = 0.012), inconsistent condom use (p = 0.038) and multiple concurrent sexual partnerships (p = 0.013)
Summary
In April 2016, the Government of Lesotho’s Ministry of Health (MoH) released new guidelines on the use of antiretroviral therapy for HIV prevention and treatment. These guidelines introduced oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) as part of the national HIV prevention strategy [1]. PrEP alone helps reduce the risk of HIV infection in the absence of other prevention methods, such as condoms. The risk of getting HIV from sex is further reduced if PrEP is used in combination with condoms or other prevention methods; PrEP is much less effective when it is not taken consistently on a daily basis [6]
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