Ask AI
ProCE Banner Activity

Female-Controlled PrEP: Empowering Women and Minimizing the Impact of Partner Resistance

Clinical Thought

The face of HIV in sub-Saharan Africa is young and female. That is why ending the HIV epidemic in this region needs us to prioritize female-controlled HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP). We must reduce the burden of HIV stigma on young women and their reliance on male partners for access to what should be routine preventive healthcare.

Released: April 10, 2026

Share

Provided by

Provided by Clinical Care Options, LLC, dba Decera Clinical Education in partnership with the Foundation for Professional Development

ProCE Banner

Supporters

Supported by an educational grant from Gilead Sciences, Inc.

Gilead Sciences, Inc.

Partners

Foundation for Professional Development

ProCE Banner

Target Audience

This activity is intended for doctors, nurses, and allied healthcare workers who provide care in sub-Saharan Africa.

Learning Objectives

Upon completion of this activity, participants should be able to:

  • Implement approaches to increase awareness and overcome barriers to uptake of HIV prevention strategies including PrEP

  • Provide each person who can benefit from PrEP with a regimen that addresses their preferences, fits well into their life, and can be sustained for as long as they wish to continue it

  • Integrate practical lessons from successful PrEP programs into their own patient care to ensure that PrEP services are person-centered, stigma-free, easily accessible, integrated with other services, and sustainable

Disclosure

Primary Author

Elizabeth Anne Bukusi, MBChB, MMed (ObGyn), MPH, PhD, PGD (Research Ethics), MBE (Research Ethics): consultant/advisor/speaker: L'Oreal, MSD, ViiV.