Provider Factors Likely to Impact Access and Uptake of Long-Acting Injectable Cabotegravir for Transgender Women in the United States: Results of a Qualitative Study (Q30381)

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  • Provider Factors Likely to Impact Access and Uptake of Long-Acting Injectable Cabotegravir for Transgender Women in the United States: Results of a Qualitative Study.
  • Provider Factors Likely to Impact Access and Uptake of Long-Acting Injectable Cabotegravir for Transgender Women in the United States
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English
Provider Factors Likely to Impact Access and Uptake of Long-Acting Injectable Cabotegravir for Transgender Women in the United States: Results of a Qualitative Study
No description defined
  • Provider Factors Likely to Impact Access and Uptake of Long-Acting Injectable Cabotegravir for Transgender Women in the United States: Results of a Qualitative Study.
  • Provider Factors Likely to Impact Access and Uptake of Long-Acting Injectable Cabotegravir for Transgender Women in the United States

Statements

Provider Factors Likely to Impact Access and Uptake of Long-Acting Injectable Cabotegravir for Transgender Women in the United States: Results of a Qualitative Study. (English)
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Long-acting injectable cabotegravir (CAB-LA) was US Food and Drug Administration-approved in 2021. (English)
Copyright © 2024 Association of Nurses in AIDS Care. (English)
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However, little is known about providers' CAB-LA knowledge, attitudes, challenges, and prescribing preferences for transgender women patients. (English)
Copyright © 2024 Association of Nurses in AIDS Care. (English)
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Understanding this is critical to developing new pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) interventions tailored to transgender women. (English)
Copyright © 2024 Association of Nurses in AIDS Care. (English)
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We conducted 45-min, in-depth Zoom interviews (IDIs) with United States-based health care providers who prescribe PrEP to transgender women. (English)
Copyright © 2024 Association of Nurses in AIDS Care. (English)
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IDIs focused on providers' CAB-LA knowledge/acceptability, willingness to prescribe CAB-LA to transgender women, potential challenges, and solutions to mitigate challenges. (English)
Copyright © 2024 Association of Nurses in AIDS Care. (English)
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Providers ( N = 17) had a mean age of 43 years, and 35.4% ( n = 6) identified as people of color. (English)
Copyright © 2024 Association of Nurses in AIDS Care. (English)
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Most ( n = 12) had basic knowledge of CAB-LA but wanted additional training. (English)
Copyright © 2024 Association of Nurses in AIDS Care. (English)
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All participants found CAB-LA acceptable and were willing to prescribe. (English)
Copyright © 2024 Association of Nurses in AIDS Care. (English)
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Most ( n = 11) anticipated minimal challenges to implementation. (English)
Copyright © 2024 Association of Nurses in AIDS Care. (English)
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Others ( n = 4) reported potential issues, including logistical/scheduling concerns that impede CAB-LA integration and staffing concerns. (English)
Copyright © 2024 Association of Nurses in AIDS Care. (English)
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Many providers expressed support for self-injection ( n = 13) and injections at "drop-in" clinics ( n = 8) to overcome challenges. (English)
Copyright © 2024 Association of Nurses in AIDS Care. (English)
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2024
1 September 2024
31 October 2024
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2024
1 September 2024
31 October 2024
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35
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5
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437-449
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437
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449
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Disclosures. (English)
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The authors report no real or perceived vested interests related to this article that could be construed as a conflict of interest. (English)
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An early version of this manuscript was presented at the 2023 Western Institute of Nursing conference in Tuscon, Arizona, USA. (English)
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