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Dr. Sarah Calabrese was featured in GW Today (May 01, 2017) for her research.

Prescribing doctors believe the HIV prevention method is unduly stigmatized in the medical field and beyond, according to a GW study.

Health care

A new study that examined medical provider attitudes toward prescribing PrEP to prevent HIV found those who already prescribe it do not see a widespread increase in risky sexual behavior among their patients as a result.

The George Washington University-led study also found providers do not consider risky behavior to be a reason to discontinue or limit PrEP, which stands for pre-exposure prophylaxis. The researchers believe adopting PrEP is essential in curbing the number of new HIV diagnosis.

PrEP was approved in the United States in 2012 and is widely considered a breakthrough in HIV prevention. PrEP has been endorsed by the World Health Organization as a means to help limit the HIV/AIDS epidemic.

Physicians have previously cited concerns, however, that a prescription for PrEP might encourage patients to engage in more risky sexual behavior, such as decreasing use of condoms or increasing the number of sexual partners.

Sarah Calabrese, lead author of the paper and assistant professor in the Department of Psychology, said traditional prevention methods like condoms have not adequately addressed the HIV/AIDS epidemic.

“PrEP is a highly effective prevention option and people deserve access to it,” she said. “Our study found that providers who have already started prescribing PrEP can play a key role in improving access—not only by offering PrEP to their own patients but also by influencing their peers to overcome ideological hurdles around prescribing PrEP.”

Forty thousand people in the United States are diagnosed with HIV every year, Dr. Calabrese said. More than 1.2 million Americans are believed to be at significant risk for contracting HIV and are eligible for PrEP, however, less than 100,000 of them have been prescribed the drug Truvada for PrEP, according to research presented at the 2016 International AIDS Conference.

Researchers interviewed 19 United States-based health care providers with experience prescribing PrEP to better understand the attitudes and experiences surrounding care.

The interviews found that providers believed their role was to support patients in making informed sexual health decisions, and providers perceived the protective benefit of PrEP outweighed any increase in a patient’s risky behavior.

Providers also believed PrEP was unduly stigmatized by others within and beyond the health care community. The same negative judgments of patients and concerns about risky behavior aren’t seen with other forms of prevention like statins used to lower cholesterol.

A paper on the study, “Support your client at the space that they’re in: Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) prescribers’ perspectives on PrEP-related risk compensation,” was published in the journal AIDS Patient Care and STDs in April.

The paper argues that there is an urgent need to prepare providers to respond appropriately as public awareness about PrEP increases and more at-risk individuals actively seek out PrEP from their health care providers.

“This includes not only enhancing providers’ comfort and competence prescribing PrEP or referring patients elsewhere for PrEP care but also educating providers about reacting to patient inquiries in a sensitive and professional way,” the paper said.

This study targeted “early adopting” providers who already had experience prescribing PrEP and have overcome concerns within their own clinical practice, Dr. Calabrese said.

Congratulations to Psychology Professor, Dr. Lisa Bowleg, on her new position as the Director of the Social and Behavioral Sciences Core of the District of Colombia Center for AIDS Research (DC CFAR)

The DC CFAR is pleased to announce that Dr. Lisa Bowleg has joined the Social and Behavioral Sciences (SBS) Core as Director, beginning in January 2018. Dr. Bowleg is a professor of applied social psychology at the George Washington University Columbian College of Arts and Sciences whose research focuses on the effects of individual-level and social-structural factors and resilience on Black men's HIV sexual risk and protective behaviors. She is the PI/joint PI of two ongoing NIH/NIMH funded R01 studies in Washington, DC. Men Count is an intervention with unemployed and/or unstably housed Black heterosexual men. Menhood examines the effects of neighborhood and individual-level stressors and resilience on Black men's sexual risk. She is also a leading scholar of the application of intersectionality to social and behavioral science research.

As SBS Core Director, Dr. Bowleg will join the DC CFAR Executive Committee and will help shape the future of the DC CFAR's work. Please join us in welcoming Dr. Bowleg to the DC CFAR leadership team!

 

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) recently announced $157 million in grant awards to launch a seven-year initiative called Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO). The ECHO program will investigate how exposure to a range of environmental factors in early development—from conception through early childhood—influences the health of children and adolescents. The NIH funding includes grants to support and extend existing longitudinal studies of children and families that examine environmental influences on children’s health outcomes. Among the grant awards is $3.2 million in funding over a two-year period to a pediatric cohort led Jody Ganiban, professor of clinical psychology in the Columbian College, Jenae Neiderhiser, professor of psychology at Penn State, and Leslie Leve, professor and associate dean for research and faculty development at the University of Oregon. This award includes the possibility of annual grant extensions through the life of the ECHO initiative.

Read the whole story: https://columbian.gwu.edu/157-million-nih-funding-targets-environmental-influences-child-health