Martez Smith, PhD, LMSW

Sociobehavioral sexual health scholar

The Magnetic Couples Study: protocol for a mixed methods prospective cohort study of HIV-serodifferent heterosexual couples’ perspectives and use of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP)


Journal article


J. McMahon, J. Simmons, J. Haberer, S. Mannheimer, Natalie M Leblanc, Leilani Torres, Robert Quiles, G. Aedo, A. Javier, Amy Braksmajer, Graham A Harriman, Nicole Trabold, E. Pouget, A. Kurth, Martez D. R. Smith, Judith Brasch, Eric J Podsiadly, P. Anderson
BMJ Open, 2021

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMedCentral PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
McMahon, J., Simmons, J., Haberer, J., Mannheimer, S., Leblanc, N. M., Torres, L., … Anderson, P. (2021). The Magnetic Couples Study: protocol for a mixed methods prospective cohort study of HIV-serodifferent heterosexual couples’ perspectives and use of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP). BMJ Open.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
McMahon, J., J. Simmons, J. Haberer, S. Mannheimer, Natalie M Leblanc, Leilani Torres, Robert Quiles, et al. “The Magnetic Couples Study: Protocol for a Mixed Methods Prospective Cohort Study of HIV-Serodifferent Heterosexual Couples’ Perspectives and Use of Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP).” BMJ Open (2021).


MLA   Click to copy
McMahon, J., et al. “The Magnetic Couples Study: Protocol for a Mixed Methods Prospective Cohort Study of HIV-Serodifferent Heterosexual Couples’ Perspectives and Use of Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP).” BMJ Open, 2021.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{j2021a,
  title = {The Magnetic Couples Study: protocol for a mixed methods prospective cohort study of HIV-serodifferent heterosexual couples’ perspectives and use of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP)},
  year = {2021},
  journal = {BMJ Open},
  author = {McMahon, J. and Simmons, J. and Haberer, J. and Mannheimer, S. and Leblanc, Natalie M and Torres, Leilani and Quiles, Robert and Aedo, G. and Javier, A. and Braksmajer, Amy and Harriman, Graham A and Trabold, Nicole and Pouget, E. and Kurth, A. and Smith, Martez D. R. and Brasch, Judith and Podsiadly, Eric J and Anderson, P.}
}

Abstract

Introduction HIV transmission within serodifferent heterosexual couples plays a key role in sustaining the global HIV pandemic. In the USA, transmission within established mixed-status couples accounts for up to half of all new HIV infections among heterosexuals. Oral HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is a highly effective prevention method, although underutilised among serodifferent couples. Moreover, there is a dearth of research on US HIV-serodifferent couples’ perspectives and use of PrEP, alone or in combination with other prevention methods. In this paper, we describe the study protocol for the Magnetic Couples Study, designed to fill critical knowledge gaps regarding HIV-serodifferent heterosexual couples’ perspectives, experiences and utilisation of PrEP. Methods and analysis The Magnetic Couples Study is a mixed methods prospective cohort study designed to describe temporal patterns and identify determinants at multiple levels (individual, couple, HCF) of PrEP outcomes along the care continuum (PrEP awareness, linkage, uptake, retention and medication adherence) among HIV-serodifferent heterosexual couples residing in New York City. The study will also examine clinical management of PrEP, side effects and changes in sexual-related and substance use–related behaviour. A prospective cohort of 230 mixed-status couples already on oral PrEP was recruited, with quarterly assessments over 18 months; in addition, a cross-sectional sample of 150 mixed-status couples not currently on PrEP was recruited. In-depth semistructured qualitative interviews were conducted with a subsample of 25 couples. Actor-partner interdependence modelling using multilevel analysis will be employed for the analysis of longitudinal dyadic data. Framework analysis will be used to analyse qualitative data. A parallel convergent design will be used for mixed methods integration. Ethics and dissemination The study was approved by the University of Rochester Institutional Review Board (RSRB00052766). Study findings will be disseminated to community members and providers and to researchers and policy makers.


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