Current:Home > MyPoinbank Exchange|PrEP prevents HIV infections, but it's not reaching Black women -AssetScope
Poinbank Exchange|PrEP prevents HIV infections, but it's not reaching Black women
SignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-09 01:35:01
Alexis Perkins thought her OB-GYN's office in Atlanta would be Poinbank Exchangejust the place to get a prescription for the type of drug that reduces a person's risk of contracting HIV.
But during a recent visit, the medical assistant who greeted her had not heard of the medicines known as preexposure prophylaxis, or PrEP, and she seemed uncomfortable discussing it, Perkins says. Her provider had heard of it but didn't feel confident prescribing it.
"She was at least honest enough to say that she was interested in it, but she didn't really know that much about it," says Perkins, a 25-year-old nurse, who decided to get on PrEP after participating in a sexual health education class and thinking more about her own risk. She's still trying to find a provider to write her a prescription.
"If I wasn't really confident in myself, this could have been a very discouraging experience," Perkins says.
PrEP is a crucial tool in the fight against the ongoing HIV epidemic and, when taken as prescribed, is highly effective at preventing infection from sexual contact or injection drug use.
But more than a decade after the first PrEP drug was approved for the U.S. market, one of the groups that would benefit most from the medications isn't taking them: Black women, such as Perkins, whose gender identity align with their sex assigned at birth.
Lack of awareness
Doctors, public health researchers, and those who provide HIV treatment and prevention services say long-standing, systemic factors, such as stigma and racism, are major barriers to PrEP uptake among cisgender Black women. Transgender Black women face obstacles to PrEP uptake as well, especially discrimination related to their gender identity.
But many researchers focus on cisgender Black women, who, they say, are often overlooked by the health care system and face obstacles like: noninclusive marketing leading to a lack of awareness about who would benefit, fewer treatment options for women than for men, and medical professionals wary to prescribe it. These challenges are even more apparent across the South, which has the highest rates of new HIV diagnoses in the country.
Women had about a fifth of new HIV infections in 2021, according to recent data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. And cisgender Black women made up an outsize share.
"If we don't figure out how we can change the system, we're just going to continue to keep failing Black women," says Tiara Willie, an assistant professor of mental health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
The FDA has approved three drugs for use as PrEP: the pills Descovy and Truvada, which also has a generic version, and the injectable Apretude. Descovy is newer and comes in a smaller tablet than Truvada, which can make it more desirable. It was approved for men and transgender women who have sex with men, but wasn't tested on people assigned female at birth.
That decision frustrated HIV researchers and advocates, including Rochelle Walensky, who worked at the Harvard University Center for AIDS Research earlier in her career, before she led the CDC.
In a 2019 editorial, Walensky and her colleague Robert H. Goldstein criticized this "two-tier system," in which men can get the medication knowing it's safe for them and with insurance approval, but women can't.
Gilead Sciences, the company that makes Descovy, later announced it would conduct a trial focused on the drug's use among cisgender women. The company said that study is ongoing, with data expected in late 2024. The CDC, for its part, earlier this year announced an $8 million grant to fund studies on strategies to increase PrEP uptake among Black cisgender women.
Black women face the same obstacles as other populations when it comes to PrEP, researchers said, but many do so with fewer resources. Recent data from the U.S. Census Bureau shows Black Americans disproportionately live in poverty and women are more likely than men to live in poverty.
Frequent doctor visits
Taking PrEP requires regular testing and doctor visits to check for HIV infection, which can present a "tremendous barrier" to access because of cost and logistics, says Michael Fordham, a program manager at the University of Alabama at Birmingham's 1917 Clinic, the largest HIV care facility in the state.
"We're actually seeing PrEP patients more frequently than we see our patients living with HIV that are stable," he says.
The CDC updated its PrEP guidelines in 2021 to reflect the latest science and drug approvals, but the agency has heard complaints from providers that they're still too onerous, says Robyn Neblett Fanfair, acting director of the agency's Division of HIV Prevention. She adds the CDC is "moving toward" guidelines that are more "timely and nimble."
Fanfair says her division is also focused on reducing the costs associated with taking PrEP, which can be significant. Just starting on PrEP can cost more than $2,000.
For now, the federal government mandates that private insurance plans cover PrEP, even as that rule faces a legal challenge. Still, in a recent study, CDC scientists found some 50,000 people had uncovered PrEP costs in 2018.
"Policies that increase access to health insurance, such as Medicaid expansion, can improve access to PrEP," the study says. "This may be especially impactful for the southern US," where many states have yet to expand the state-federal insurance program for low-income people under the Affordable Care Act.
But paying for PrEP isn't the only barrier to access, especially in the South.
Dangers and stigma
HIV and other sexually transmitted infections can still be uncomfortable for physicians and nurse practitioners to talk about in the "Bible Belt," despite their prevalence, says Anitra Walker, the vice president of operations at Mercy Care, an Atlanta-area health clinic that gets federal funding.
Social stigma not only can prevent Black women from talking about PrEP with their friends, neighbors, and doctors, but it can seep into their domestic relationships, says Mauda Monger, an assistant professor at the School of Population Health at the University of Mississippi Medical Center.
"If their partner is the person providing their housing, their food, and resources for their children, saying 'I'm on PrEP' openly may actually put her livelihood in jeopardy," says Monger, noting further that broaching the subject can put women at risk of physical harm.
Increasing PrEP uptake requires expanding access to good jobs, affordable health care, and stable housing, Monger says, to allow Black women to feel more empowered to take control of their health.
Researchers also said messaging about PrEP and how it's marketed needs to change.
Willie, from Johns Hopkins, conducted focus groups in 2019 in Jackson, Mississippi, with Black cisgender women, who said they felt their experiences weren't reflected in advertising campaigns for PrEP.
If "it wasn't just gay men or transgender people who are in the ads," one participant said, "then it would make everybody feel like ... it's not just for specific people."
Researchers have to "work upstream" to undo those perceptions once they take hold, says Jessica Sales, an associate professor at Emory University's Rollins School of Public Health.
Sales is partnering with Atlanta sexual health nonprofit SisterLove to train a small fleet of "influencers" to host informal conversations with community members and study their effectiveness in increasing PrEP knowledge, interest, and uptake among cisgender women. Perkins, the nurse who was unable to get a PrEP prescription from her OB-GYN, is part of the cohort.
SisterLove's Healthy Love curriculum, backed by the CDC, gives Black women and their social groups the "freedom to hold conversations differently" than they would with medical providers, says the group's founder, Dázon Dixon Diallo.
Failing to ensure cisgender Black women have access to — and are actually interested in taking — PrEP will undermine the fight to bring the HIV epidemic under control, Diallo warns.
There's "damage that has to be undone," she says. "If we're not centering Black women in this epidemic, we are getting nowhere to the end."
KFF Health News, formerly known as Kaiser Health News (KHN), is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF — the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism.
veryGood! (7)
Related
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Former gym teacher at Christian school charged with carjacking, robbery in Grindr crimes
- LeBron James 'proud' to announce Duquesne's hire of Dru Joyce III, his high school teammate
- Victim Natania Reuben insists Sean 'Diddy' Combs pulled trigger in 1999 NYC nightclub shooting
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- March Madness games today: Everything to know about NCAA Tournament's Sweet 16 schedule
- Families of victims in Baltimore bridge collapse speak out: Tremendous agony
- Writer Percival Everett: In ownership of language there resides great power
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- Solar eclipse warnings pile up: Watch out for danger in the sky, on the ground on April 8
Ranking
- Sam Taylor
- California man convicted of killing his mother is captured in Mexico after ditching halfway house
- 2024 Masters field: Jon Rahm, Scottie Scheffler, Tiger Woods lead loaded group
- Warriors' Draymond Green says he 'deserved' early ejection; Steph Curry responds
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Score Up to 95% off at Nordstrom Rack's Clear the Rack Sale: Madewell, Kate Spade, Chloé & More
- CLFCOIN: Gold and Bitcoin hit new highs
- For years she thought her son had died of an overdose. The police video changed all that
Recommendation
DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
Massachusetts joins with NCAA, sports teams to tackle gambling among young people
The Bachelor's Kelsey Anderson Explains How That Limo Moment Went Down
ASTRO COIN:The bull market history of bitcoin under the mechanism of halving
North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
ASTRO: Bitcoin has historically halved data
4 prison guards in custody for allegedly helping 5 escape county jail
John Harrison: The truth behind the four consecutive kills in the Vietnamese market