08/15/2016
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Mehroz Baig
Communications Specialist
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“PrEP for a lot of women, will be their entry point for access to care,” noted Martha Cameron, Director of Prevention at The Women’s Collective.
“They are hearing about it for the first time and you see the
surprise,” she added. “The first part of the session is trying to
convince people that it’s real, it’s out there, that it’s for women and
not just for MSM, and it works.”
The Women’s
Collective is a non-profit organization in Washington D.C. that serves
women of color who are HIV positive or at risk for HIV. They’re working
with the D.C. Department of Health on PrEP for Her,
a new campaign that aims to increase knowledge about PrEP, or
pre-exposure prophylaxis, among African-American Women. PrEP can be more
than 90 percent effective in preventing HIV when taken daily.
Not everyone
who is eligible for PrEP is aware of it, however, and that’s where the
health department along with their community partners hope to make a
dent. CDC estimates that
there are 1.2 million people in the nation who are eligible for PrEP:
38 percent are women. “This group hasn’t really been targeted in any
other initiative,” noted Ashlee Wimberly, PrEP for Women Project
Coordinator at the Washington AIDS Partnership, a similar initiative to bring PrEP awareness to women. “There’s a very big gap.”
Ms. Wimberly is referring specifically to women of color. “The most
important thing that needs to be mentioned is that there has hardly been
any campaign, social media strategies, even images out there that have
targeted women in general and especially women of color with regard to
PrEP,” added Ms. Cameron.
17.2 percent of HIV diagnoses in 2014 in DC were among women; of all the women diagnosed, 91.2 percent were Black. Data from
Gilead Sciences, the pharmaceutical company that makes Truvada® (the
medication used for PrEP), showed an almost four fold increase in PrEP
uptake between 2014 and 2015 among men, while the numbers of women
taking PrEP remained stagnant.
PrEP for Her
wants to change that. “It’s exciting to see it come together,” said Dr.
Travis Gayles, Chief Medical Office at the D.C. Health Department. “I
think for so long, especially around HIV, a lot of our resources haven’t
been targeted towards women.” Dr. Gayles noted that while there are
high numbers of men who have sex with men (MSM) impacted by HIV, and
thus much of HIV prevention efforts focus on that population, it’s
exciting to have an effort that includes women as well.
However,
prescribing PrEP isn’t enough. “I’m a big believer that the easy part of
PrEP is to write a prescription,” Dr. Gayles said. Ms. Cameron agrees.
“The drug is not the issue,” she said. “The issue is you have to have
follow-up medical care, and labs, and so on.” Ms. Cameron noted that
many of the women she works with face barriers to sustained care, from
financial instability, to housing security, being in violent
relationships, and having mental health or substance use concerns. All
those aspects must be addressed in order to reap the benefits from PrEP.
Dr. Gayles concurs. “There are a lot of factors that go into adherence
beyond just the patient’s desire to take the medication,” he said.
Ms. Wimberly
added that the PrEp for Women Initiative aims to reach 5,000 women and
300 doctors in D.C. to increase knowledge and PrEP awareness through
social media and traditional marketing over the next two years. The
conversation is about empowering women and PrEP helps HIV negative women
do that by putting prevention in their hands, in the form of a pill.
Everyone agrees that messages about PrEP must be relevant for women and
their sexual circumstances. “I think we definitely have to make sure
that the information is accessible and we relay it in a way that
connects with our intended audience,” Ms. Wimberly said. “If we’re going
to be effective, that’s a key piece to it.”
The D.C.
Health Department launched the PrEP for Her initiative this year with
funding from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the MAC
AIDS Foundation. In July 2016, their STD clinic began offering PrEP to
patients for the first time. The Washington AIDS Partnership launched
the D.C. PrEP for Women initiative in July 2016. This fall, the
Partnership will release a request for applications to support
innovative projects aimed at increasing PrEP knowledge and utilization
in Washington, D.C. Additionally, the D.C. Health Department provides
funding to The Women’s Collective for some of their HIV prevention
efforts.
The views expressed herein do not necessarily reflect the official policies of the City and County of San Francisco.
Read more articles from Mehroz Baig at The Huffington Post, here.
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