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Abstract
Transgender women's (TW) social networks may facilitate HIV prevention information dissemination and normative reinforcement. We conducted a qualitative study of social networks among 20 TW affiliated with 3 "casas trans" (houses shared among TW) in Lima, Peru, using diffusion of innovations theory to investigate community-level HIV prevention norms. Participants completed demographic questionnaires, social network interviews, and semistructured in-depth interviews. Median age was 26 and all participants engaged in sex work. Interviews revealed high HIV prevention knowledge and positive attitudes, but low engagement in HIV prevention. Respondents primarily discussed HIV prevention with other TW. Network members' opinions about pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) frequently influenced respondents' personal beliefs, including mistrust of healthcare personnel, concern that PrEP efficacy was unproven, fear of adverse effects, and frustration regarding difficulty accessing PrEP. Patterns of influence in TW networks may be leveraged to improve uptake of HIV prevention tools, including PrEP.
Publisher
Journal of the International AIDS Society
Published On
Aug 07, 2023
Authors
Tijana Temelkovska, Kathleen Moriarty, Leyla Huerta, Amaya Perez-Brumer, Eddy Segura, Ryan Colby Passaro, Jordan E Lake, Jesse Clark, Cherie Blair
Tags
Transgender women
HIV prevention
PrEP
social networks
qualitative study
Lima
sex work
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