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      Injectable Long-Acting Cabotegravir–Rilpivirine Therapy for People Living With HIV/AIDS: Addressing Implementation Barriers From the Start

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          Abstract

          Injectable cabotegravir and rilpivirine (CAB/RPV), administered bimonthly by a medical provider, is convenient and improves privacy and medication management. One year after approval, myriad implementation barriers threaten the access and sustainability of this life-saving innovation: (1) eligibility issues (viral suppression, drug resistance, and failed oral regimens); (2) injection requires medical provider and transportation to facility; (3) strict medication adherence; (4) life challenges—mental health, homelessness, joblessness; and (5) lack of insurance and high cost. Universal implementation of CAB/RPV calls for social, human, and health organizations to partner and provide HIV continuum of care and prevention services to facilitate CAB/RPV access and maintenance and for transparent health insurance billing practices to abate uncertainty concerning CAB/RPV's classification as a pharmaceutical or medical benefit and related cost implications.

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          Most cited references24

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          Antiretroviral Drugs for Treatment and Prevention of HIV Infection in Adults: 2020 Recommendations of the International Antiviral Society–USA Panel

          Data on the use of antiretroviral drugs, including new drugs and formulations, for the treatment and prevention of HIV infection continue to guide optimal practices.
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            The Association of HIV-Related Stigma to HIV Medication Adherence: A Systematic Review and Synthesis of the Literature.

            This paper provides a review of the quantitative literature on HIV-related stigma and medication adherence, including: (1) synthesis of the empirical evidence linking stigma to adherence, (2) examination of proposed causal mechanisms of the stigma and adherence relationship, and (3) methodological critique and guidance for future research. We reviewed 38 studies reporting either cross-sectional or prospective analyses of the association of HIV-related stigma to medication adherence since the introduction of antiretroviral therapies (ART). Although there is substantial empirical evidence linking stigma to adherence difficulties, few studies provided data on psychosocial mechanisms that may account for this relationship. Proposed mechanisms include: (a) enhanced vulnerability to mental health difficulties, (b) reduction in self-efficacy, and (c) concerns about inadvertent disclosure of HIV status. Future research should strive to assess the multiple domains of stigma, use standardized measures of adherence, and include prospective analyses to test mediating variables.
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              Housing Status, Medical Care, and Health Outcomes Among People Living With HIV/AIDS: A Systematic Review.

              Accumulating evidence suggests responses to HIV that combine individual-level interventions with those that address structural or contextual factors that influence risks and health outcomes of infection. Housing is such a factor. Housing occupies a strategic position as an intermediate structural factor, linking "upstream" economic, social, and cultural determinants to the more immediate physical and social environments in which everyday life is lived. The importance of housing status for HIV prevention and care has been recognized, but much of this attention has focused on homeless individuals as a special risk group. Analyses have less often addressed community housing availability and conditions as factors influencing population health or unstable, inadequate, or unaffordable housing as a situation or temporary state. A focus on individual-level characteristics associated with literal homelessness glosses over social, economic, and policy drivers operating largely outside any specific individual's control that affect housing and residential environments and the health resources or risk exposures such contexts provide.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                J Assoc Nurses AIDS Care
                J Assoc Nurses AIDS Care
                JANAC
                JNC
                The Journal of the Association of Nurses in AIDS Care
                Wolters Kluwer (Philadelphia, PA )
                1055-3290
                1552-6917
                Mar-Apr 2023
                20 January 2023
                : 34
                : 2
                : 216-220
                Affiliations
                Rogério M. Pinto, PhD, is a Professor, School of Social Work and School of Music, Theatre, and Dance, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA. Evan Hall, BS, is an Undergraduate Research Assistant, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA. Ryan Tomlin, PharmD, BCPS, AAHIVP, is a Clinical HIV Pharmacist, Mercy Health Saint Mary's, Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA.
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding author: Rogério M. Pinto, e-mail: ropinto@ 123456umich.edu
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6077-3406
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0927-5214
                Article
                JANAC-D-22-00067 00010
                10.1097/JNC.0000000000000386
                9951790
                36662654
                7cefa24c-6534-415a-9200-c2b601a64a16
                Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the Association of Nurses in AIDS Care.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives License 4.0 (CCBY-NC-ND), where it is permissible to download and share the work provided it is properly cited. The work cannot be changed in any way or used commercially without permission from the journal.

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                implementation barriers,cab/rpv,injectable long-acting antiretroviral therapy,la art

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