PrEP Prescribing in Inclusive, Person-Centered Environments
Discussions about HIV and HIV risk typically requires an open dialogue about sensitive, often stigmatized behaviors between patients and their healthcare providers. Fostering this dialogue requires the provision of healthcare services in an environment where patients feel comfortable discussing not only their sexual histories, but other aspects of their identity that might increase their risk for HIV transmission such as injection drug use, sex work, violence, food security, and housing status.
Many of the well-established sexual health and LGBTQIA+ specialty clinics in the U.S., often considered “safe spaces” by members of the LGBTQIA+ community, were early proponents of PrEP, including organizations such as the San Francisco AIDS Foundation (San Francisco), Callen-Lorde (New York City), and the Fenway Institute (Boston). These well-established health centers are typically viewed as safe spaces because they implement best practices for the provision of culturally competent primary and specialty care to the sexual and gender community members they serve.48
While LGBTQIA+ community trust is undoubtedly an essential component for the delivery of sexual health and HIV prevention services in this population, it is also important to note that not all individuals at risk for HIV seek out or desire to seek out healthcare in these environments. For example, MSM who are reluctant to disclose their sexuality or who do not identify as MSM despite having sexual encounters with male-identifying persons, may be unlikely to frequent these clinics for fear of being “outed.” As such, relegating the provision of PrEP only to these clinical practice environments could risk limiting who has access to this invaluable HIV prevention tool. Ensuring that all people at risk for HIV have access to PrEP means offering PrEP in a diverse range of clinical environments frequented by cisgender, heterosexual individuals and specialty practices serving subgroups like LGBTQIA+ community members and persons who inject drugs (PWID).
Telehealth and TelePrEP
The COVID-19 pandemic jettisoned telehealth services into the lives of both healthcare consumers and providers. At the height of the pandemic, virtual care and telehealth visits were among the only methods for receiving routine healthcare services in some settings. Increased institutional support and infrastructure to support telehealth visits, relaxed licensing requirements to provide telehealth services across state lines, and changes to reimbursement policies certainly motivated providers to adopt
telehealth technology amidst the COVID-19 pandemic.49 Just as telehealth has become more prevalent in many primary care settings and medical subspecialties, telehealth has become a method used to make PrEP available to patients from the comfort of their home or office.
Several internet based providers provide PrEP services remotely via telehealth.50,51 Unlike the in-office HIV/STI testing typically performed during most in-person PrEP visits, patients evaluated via telehealth are given the option to visit a local laboratory or are sent a home test kit to self-test for HIV and STIs. Patients repeat this process quarterly while they remain on PrEP in accordance with current clinical practice guidelines. Some of these “TelePrEP” services will mail patients’ PrEP medication to their homes in discreet packaging, eliminating the need to visit a retail pharmacy in their communities. Taken together, there are many reasons why TelePrEP may be appealing to people at risk for HIV.
At the same time, like all implementation strategies, TelePrEP has limitations. For example, it is unreasonable to expect that all telehealth providers could contract with all third-party insurance providers in the U.S. Thus, not all patients have equal access to this care delivery model. Similar to the financial barriers affecting patients of conventional brick-and-mortar practices, TelePrEP practices might elect to see uninsured patients on a fee-exempt or a reduced, sliding-scale fee schedule; however, the cost of medication and quarterly HIV testing remain barriers to PrEP access. In addition, sexual and gender minority individuals, transgender and gender non-conforming individuals in particular, are disproportionately affected by poverty and homelessness in the U.S. These individuals may not have access to the internet or a private space to have a telehealth visit.52 While telehealth certainly makes PrEP access more convenient, it is unclear how or if these services connect patients to PrEP who would otherwise not have had access via conventional means (e.g., a primary care provider, STI clinic, LGBTQIA+ specialty practice). Nevertheless, TelePrEP remains a valuable implementation strategy that can expand the reach of PrEP given the convenience and/or discretion associated with this delivery method.
PrEP Access Via Community-Based Pharmacies
Approximately 90% of Americans live within five miles of at least one pharmacy.53 This is, at least in part, why retail pharmacies have become popular venues for preventative care services, such as immunizations. Recognizing the need for increased PrEP access, as of 2021, legislation has been passed or introduced in at least 11 U.S. states that would allow pharmacists the ability to dispense a defined quantity of PrEP medication to a patient – covered by third-party prescription coverage, if applicable – without a physician prescription.54 For example, signed into law in California in October 2019, SB 159 allows California pharmacists to dispense PrEP for 60 days and post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) to patients without a prescription.55 This process extends an existing policy framework granting California pharmacists the ability to dispense hormonal contraception and naloxone hydrochloride without a prescription.
Differentiated PrEP delivery through community pharmacies could be convenient for patients and expand PrEP access to individuals who might otherwise not know about or have access to PrEP when provided in primary care. However, there may be impediments to the successful implementation of this PrEP model that might negatively affect the ability of pharmacists to provide PrEP to patients who would benefit. Among the most significant barriers to initiating PrEP in a retail pharmacy environment are the staffing needs, resources, and time required to screen patients for PrEP eligibility and/or perform any necessary HIV testing. Furthermore, these services may or may not be eligible for reimbursement and may not generate revenue. Furthermore, in some communities, there may not be a straightforward referral pathway from the community pharmacist to a prescriber beyond the initial 60-day supply furnished by a pharmacist, heightening concerns about patient support and the prospects for “prevention effective” use.
PrEP… In the Emergency Department?
The emergency department (ED) has emerged as an important venue for disease screening and prevention initiatives in some U.S. healthcare facilities – particularly since many Americans do not have an established relationship with a primary care provider and, as of 2021, nearly one in 10 Americans lack health insurance coverage.56 With respect to HIV, a number of EDs across the U.S. have adopted an “opt- out” approach to HIV screening,57,58 which is a well-documented strategy to identify people with undiagnosed HIV infection and to link or re-link people living with HIV to care. In this model, all patients (or patients meeting specific criteria) who undergo a blood draw in the context of their ED visit undergo serologic testing for HIV. Opt-out HIV screening has proven to be an effective strategy to diagnose HIV infections in ED populations, which serve many patients who may not have access to routine preventative healthcare services or who would not otherwise independently seek out HIV screening.58
In EDs with HIV testing and linkage-to-care programs, PrEP screening and delivery is a logical programmatic expansion for people at risk of HIV who are HIV-uninfected. A recent systematic review conducted by Gormley and colleagues (2022) suggests that several U.S. EDs have trialed PrEP initiatives.27 Interestingly, many of these programs adopted different patient screening criteria for PrEP candidacy. For example, some studies included in the review relied on a personal history of a recent STI to be considered for a PrEP referral; very few studies in this review screened for risk factors such as sex work or having a person living with HIV or a PWID as a sexual partner. No studies examined PrEP initiation on the same day of an ED visit. All EDs with PrEP initiatives in the Gormley et al. (2022) review identified a large proportion of patients they screened to be at high risk for HIV acquisition and to be eligible for PrEP, demonstrating the potential value of the approach.
The provision of PrEP in the ED faces several implementation challenges that could undermine organizational and ED providers’ willingness to adopt this strategy. Emergency medicine providers’ knowledge and familiarity with PrEP is one such limiting factor. However, other factors that might limit the ability to provide PrEP in this fast-paced clinical setting include: the lack of efficient, reliable PrEP screening tools, a lack of requisite laboratory data (as many PrEP-eligible patients may not have baseline labs, including renal function, available), and a lack of reliable, established referral networks for patients to follow-up with for PrEP continuation.
Most EDs have established infrastructure for contacting patients about diagnostic test results and placing aftercare referrals. Leveraging this existing infrastructure to connect patients to PrEP services could make the ED a viable setting to reaching a population that may or may not have health insurance or access to routine medical care and, as a result, may not otherwise be offered PrEP. Conversely, there are established barriers to patient follow-up following an ED visit; one recent study found that nearly 30% of patients evaluated in U.S. EDs lacked follow-up one month after being evaluated.59 In this regard, discharging patients with an established HIV risk from the ED with a prescription for PrEP (e.g., same-day PrEP) without a reliable follow-up plan or scheduled follow-up appointment may limit the success and feasibility of initiating PrEP in the ED.