Innovative pre-exposure prophylaxis interventions among adolescent girls and young women during COVID-19 lockdown period in sub-Saharan Africa: A systematic review
Abstract
Adolescent girls and young women are key, and priority populations impacted by a higher risk of acquiring human immunodeficiency virus. In 2015, pre-exposure prophylaxis was introduced as a biomedical human immunodeficiency virus prevention tool. However, its uptake continues to be lower in sub-Saharan countries, particularly among adolescent girls and young women. The uptake may have worsened during the Coronavirus disease 2019 lockdown restrictions. Innovative interventions to improve its uptake were implemented, this review aimed to identify and describe these interventions in sub-Saharan Africa. We searched four electronic databases (PubMed, Scopus, Google Scholar, and MEDLINE) between 01 April 2019 and 30 April 2024 and 1212 articles were identified. Of these 287 full-text articles were assessed and ultimately, 14 articles were included since they reported on the pre-exposure prophylaxis interventions implemented before and during the lockdown period among adolescent girls and young women. Innovative interventions like using social media platforms and decentralizing pre-exposure prophylaxis through community delivery were identified across Sub-Saharan African countries. Irrespective of the challenges in implementing these interventions, improvements in pre-exposure prophylaxis uptake and adherence were observed. These interventions can potentially improve access to traditionally hard-to-reach individuals and address structural barriers to better access human immunodeficiency virus prevention service delivery.
Authors
Olifant LL, Phalane E, Phaswana-Mafuya RN
Year
2024
Topics
- Epidemiology and Determinants of Health
- Determinants of Health
- Determinants of Health
- Health services
- Population(s)
- Women
- Children or Youth (less than 18 years old)
- General HIV- population
- Prevention, Engagement and Care Cascade
- Prevention
- Prevention
- Biomedical interventions
- Co-infections
- Other
- Health Systems
- Delivery arrangements