Achieving HIV epidemic control through accelerating efforts to expand access to pre-exposure prophylaxis for people who inject drugs.

IF 2.3 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Frontiers in reproductive health Pub Date : 2024-10-23 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/frph.2024.1438005
Lirica Nishimoto, Adaobi Lisa Olisa, Philip Imohi, Judy Chang, Chris Obermeyer, Dama Kabwali, Christopher Akolo
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Abstract

The world is not on track to reach the majority of the UNAIDS 2025 targets, and people who inject drugs (PWID) continue to be left behind, hindered by counterproductive law enforcement practices, punitive laws, economic distress, and social stigma and discrimination. Poor access to HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) among PWID is nested within the limited access to broader harm reduction services, including needle and syringe programs, opioid overdose management, opioid agonist therapy (also known as medication-assisted treatment), and condoms. Among PWID, women who inject drugs are disproportionately affected and face additional gender-based barriers. Intersections between PWID and other key and priority population groups also exist. Although the prioritization of PWID for new PrEP products like the dapivirine vaginal ring and injectable cabotegravir has lagged in research, studies have shown that PWID find injectable and long-acting options acceptable and preferrable, including among women who inject drugs. While new PrEP products introduce new opportunities, equity in access must be assured for optimized impact toward achieving epidemic control. Programming for services must engage and empower PWID community leadership to address the structural barriers to services, implement community-led, differentiated, and integrated service modalities, and offer the choice of all harm reduction options to close the equity gaps in health outcomes. While waiting for necessary evidence and approvals, programs should work together with the PWID community to prioritize, expand, and facilitate efforts and investments toward increased access to and integration of PrEP and all recommended harm reduction services for PWID.

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通过加快努力,扩大注射吸毒者获得接触前预防的机会,实现对艾滋病毒疫情的控制。
世界无法如期实现联合国艾滋病规划署 2025 年的大部分目标,注射吸毒者(PWID)继续被抛在后面,受到适得其反的执法行为、惩罚性法律、经济窘迫以及社会羞辱和歧视的阻碍。注射吸毒者难以获得艾滋病毒暴露前预防(PrEP),这与他们难以获得更广泛的减低危害服务有关,包括针头和针筒计划、阿片类药物过量管理、阿片类药物激动剂治疗(也称为药物辅助治疗)和安全套。在注射吸毒者中,注射吸毒妇女受到的影响尤为严重,她们还面临着更多基于性别的障碍。注射吸毒者与其他关键和优先人群之间也存在交叉。尽管在研究中,将达匹韦林阴道环和注射用卡博替拉韦等新型 PrEP 产品列为优先考虑的人群滞后,但研究表明,PWID 认为注射用和长效选择是可接受和可取的,包括在注射吸毒的妇女中。虽然新的 PrEP 产品带来了新的机遇,但必须确保公平获取,以优化对实现流行病控制的影响。服务计划的制定必须让注射吸毒者社区的领导参与进来,并赋予他们权力,以解决获得服务的结构性障碍,实施社区主导的、有区别的和综合的服务模式,并提供所有减少伤害的选择,以缩小在健康结果方面的公平差距。在等待必要的证据和批准的同时,各项计划应与艾滋病感染者社区共同努力,优先考虑、扩大并促进各项工作和投资,以增加艾滋病感染者获得 PrEP 和所有建议的减低危害服务的机会,并将这些服务整合在一起。
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2.00
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审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊最新文献
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