4.3 Article

Who Can I Ask? Who Would I Tell? An Egocentric Network Analysis Among a Sample of Women At-Risk to Explore Anticipated Advice Seeking and Disclosure Around Pre-exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP)

Journal

AIDS AND BEHAVIOR
Volume 26, Issue 9, Pages 2866-2880

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10461-022-03621-9

Keywords

Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP); Black; African-American women; Social network analysis

Funding

  1. National Institute On Drug Abuse (NIDA) of the National Institutes of Health [R01DA038185, K01DA031031]
  2. San Diego Center for AIDS Research [P30AI036214]
  3. NIDA [R21DA043417-02]

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This study examines how women engage with others in health campaigns about Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP). The findings reveal that women tend to seek advice and discuss PrEP with close, supportive, and trusted network members. The study highlights the complexity of network activation and emphasizes the importance of considering the broader social context for women at risk for HIV.
Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) health campaigns invite women to talk with their provider, partner, and peers about PrEP, though they do not offer specific guidance about who and how to engage. This study uses egocentric network methods in a sample of women at risk for HIV to understand what characteristics of women (egos), their networks, and network members (alters) were associated with anticipated PrEP advice-seeking and anticipated PrEP disclosure. Multivariable generalized linear mixed models revealed that women often consider close, supportive, and trusted network members as PrEP discussants while ego-level, network-level, and cross-level interactions depict the complexity of anticipated network activation. Findings highlight the importance of considering women at risk for HIV in a broader social context. Anticipated advice-seeking and disclosure related to PrEP were associated but distinct forms of network activation, which highlights the need to develop specific recommendations about who and how women should engage with their networks around PrEP.

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