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02170 ATTITUDES TOWARDS, AND EXPECTATIONS FOR, VAGINAL MICROBICIDES AMONG THAI HIV PREVENTION POLICYMAKERS Nielsen, Nathan D. Objective: To define attitudes, biases and expectations of key participants in the Thai HIV prevention arena regarding vaginal microbicides as a HIV prevention modality. Core questions to be addressed include: perceived advantages/drawbacks; potential user groups; distribution channels; sources of resistance to introduction; and expectations of efficacy. Methods: Twenty-one selected participants were interviewed over a 4-week period utilizing a 20-question semi-structured questionnaire encompassing all core research questions. Respondents were both Thai and expatriate, representing the Thai Ministry of Public Health (MoPH), the Thai MoPH-U.S. CDC Collaboration, UN agencies, and NGOs. Results: Several suggestive trends emerged: efficacy was the most important factor in determining future availability; potential for use without knowledge of a partner was seen as an advantage; the MoPH was regarded as the most important potential source of resistance to introduction; expectations of efficacy were higher in Thai vs. non-Thai respondents, especially MoPH officials; a mix of private (commercial) and public (governmental) channels was favoured for distribution; and over-the-counter distribution was highly preferred over prescription-based methods. Conclusions: Direct collaboration with the Thai MoPH prior to introduction of a vaginal microbicide is essential; microbicides should not initially be introduced as a stand-alone prevention modality; and a combination of public health and commercial channels will be required for effective and wide-spread distribution. Mr. Nathan D. Nielsen, MSc. |
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