Clear Search sequence regions


Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

This study explored the factors associated with Black women's confidence in their ability to engage male sexual partners in discussions about PrEP. Communication about PrEP with male partners is an important, yet minimally explored, outcome in PrEP research among Black women in heterosexual partnerships. Among 315 respondents, results show significant differences in anticipated stigma and interest in PrEP between a binary outcome variable being confident and not-confident discussing PrEP with sexual partners. Further, factors such as employment, worrying about HIV infection, interest in taking oral PrEP, subjective norms, injunctive norms, and descriptive norms were associated with Black women's higher odds of confidence in their ability to engage sexual partners about PrEP. Conversely, PrEP disapproval and stigma resulted in lower odds of Black women's confidence in their ability to engage sexual partners about PrEP. Results indicate the need for continued investigation of confidence and, relatedly, communication about PrEP among heterosexual couples and communitylevel interventions normalizing PrEP discussions and uptake.

Citation

Whitney Irie, Anais Mahone, Raja Nakka, Musie Ghebremichael. Confidence in Ability to Communicate With Sexual Partners About PrEP Among Black Cisgender Women. AIDS education and prevention : official publication of the International Society for AIDS Education. 2023 Oct;35(5):333-346

Expand section icon Mesh Tags

Expand section icon Substances


PMID: 37843905

View Full Text