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    Defining gaps in pre-exposure prophylaxis delivery for pregnant and post-partum women in high-burden settings using an implementation science framework

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    Research article (243.7Kb)
    Date
    2020
    Author
    Pintye, Jillian
    Davey, Dvora L. Joseph
    Wagner, Anjuli D.
    John-Stewart, Grace
    Baggaley, Rachel
    Bekker, Linda-Gail
    Celum, Connie
    Chi, Benjamin H.
    Coates, Thomas J.
    Groves, Allison K.
    Haberer, Jessica E.
    Heffron, Renee
    Kinuthia, John
    Matthews, Lynn T.
    McIntyre, James A.
    Moodley, Dhayendre
    Mofenson, Lynne M.
    Mugo, Nelly
    Mujugira, Andrew
    Myer, Landon
    Shoptaw, Steven
    Stranix-Chibanda, Lynda
    Baeten, Jared M.
    PrEP in Pregnancy Working Group
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    Abstract
    Pregnancy is a high-risk period for HIV acquisition in African women, and pregnant women who become acutely infected with HIV account for up to a third of vertical HIV transmission cases in African settings. To protect women and eliminate vertical transmission, WHO recommends offering oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) based on tenofovir to HIV-negative pregnant and post-partum women with a substantial risk of HIV acquisition. PrEP implementation for pregnant and post-partum women lags behind implementation for other high-risk populations. Unique considerations for PrEP implementation arise during pregnancy and post partum, including the integration of provider training with clinical delivery and monitoring of PrEP exposure and outcomes within existing maternal health systems, yet scarce implementation data are available to generate evidence in this context.
    URI
    10.1016/S2352-3018(20)30102-8
    http://hdl.handle.net/10570/14624
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    • Infectious Diseases Institute (IDI) Collections

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