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Published in: AIDS and Behavior 5/2020

Open Access 01-05-2020 | Human Immunodeficiency Virus | Original Paper

Efficacy is Not Everything: Eliciting Women’s Preferences for a Vaginal HIV Prevention Product Using a Discrete-Choice Experiment

Authors: Erica N. Browne, Elizabeth T. Montgomery, Carol Mansfield, Marco Boeri, Brennan Mange, Mags Beksinska, Jill L. Schwartz, Meredith R. Clark, Gustavo F. Doncel, Jenni Smit, Zvavahera M. Chirenje, Ariane van der Straten

Published in: AIDS and Behavior | Issue 5/2020

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Abstract

As new female-initiated HIV prevention products enter development, it is crucial to incorporate women’s preferences to ensure products will be desired, accepted, and used. A discrete-choice experiment was designed to assess the relative importance of six attributes to stated choice of a vaginally delivered HIV prevention product. Sexually active women in South Africa and Zimbabwe aged 18–30 were recruited from two samples: product-experienced women from a randomized trial of four vaginal placebo forms and product-naïve community members. In a tablet-administered survey, 395 women chose between two hypothetical products over eight choice sets. Efficacy was the most important, but there were identifiable preferences among other attributes. Women preferred a product that also prevented pregnancy and caused some wetness (p < 0.001). They disliked a daily-use product (p = 0.002) and insertion by finger (p = 0.002). Although efficacy drove preference, wetness, pregnancy prevention, and dosing regimen were influential to stated choice of a product, and women were willing to trade some level of efficacy to have other more desired attributes.
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Metadata
Title
Efficacy is Not Everything: Eliciting Women’s Preferences for a Vaginal HIV Prevention Product Using a Discrete-Choice Experiment
Authors
Erica N. Browne
Elizabeth T. Montgomery
Carol Mansfield
Marco Boeri
Brennan Mange
Mags Beksinska
Jill L. Schwartz
Meredith R. Clark
Gustavo F. Doncel
Jenni Smit
Zvavahera M. Chirenje
Ariane van der Straten
Publication date
01-05-2020
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
AIDS and Behavior / Issue 5/2020
Print ISSN: 1090-7165
Electronic ISSN: 1573-3254
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10461-019-02715-1

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