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- Title
Decisional Balance and Contemplation Ladder to Support Interventions for HIV Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Uptake and Persistence.
- Authors
John, Steven A.; Rendina, H. Jonathon; Starks, Tyrel J.; Parsons, Jeffrey T.; Grov, Christian
- Abstract
Fewer than 60,000 males—inclusive of all sexual identities—were prescribed HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) by mid-2017 in the United States. Efforts to increase PrEP uptake among gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (GBM), in particular, are ongoing in research and practice settings, but few tools exist to support interventions. We aimed to develop and validate tools to support motivational interviewing interventions for PrEP. In 2017, a national sample of HIV-negative GBM of relatively high socioeconomic status (n = 786) was asked about sexual behaviors that encompass Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines for PrEP use, a 35-item decisional-balance scale (i.e., PrEP-DB) assessing benefits and consequences of PrEP use, and questions assessing location on the motivational PrEP cascade and derivative—the PrEP contemplation ladder. Principal axis factoring with oblique promax rotation was used for PrEP-DB construct identification and item reduction. The final 20-item PrEP-DB performed well; eigenvalues indicating a 4-factor solution provided an adequate fit to the data. Factors included the following: health benefits (α = 0.91), health consequences (α = 0.82), social benefits (α = 0.72), and social consequences (α = 0.86). Ladder scores increased across the cascade (ρ = 0.89, p < 0.001), and health benefits (β = 0.50, p < 0.001) and health consequences (β = −0.37, p < 0.001) were more strongly associated with ladder location than social benefits (β = 0.05, p > 0.05) and social consequences (β = −0.05, p > 0.05) in the fully adjusted regression model. The PrEP-DB demonstrated good reliability and predictive validity, and the ladder had strong construct validity with the motivational PrEP cascade. PrEP uptake and persistence interventions and additional empirical work could benefit from the utility of these measures.
- Subjects
HIV prevention; CENTERS for Disease Control &; Prevention (U.S.); DECISION making; EXPERIMENTAL design; RESEARCH methodology; MEDICAL protocols; PREVENTIVE medicine; QUESTIONNAIRES; REGRESSION analysis; RELIABILITY (Personality trait); HUMAN sexuality; LGBTQ+ people; SOCIOECONOMIC factors; MOTIVATIONAL interviewing; PREDICTIVE validity; MULTITRAIT multimethod techniques; RESEARCH methodology evaluation; MEN who have sex with men
- Publication
AIDS Patient Care & STDs, 2019, Vol 33, Issue 2, p67
- ISSN
1087-2914
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1089/apc.2018.0136