%0 Journal Article %T Interpersonal and Community-Level Influences Across the PrEP Cascade Among Young Adult Latinx Men who Have Sex with Men Living in a US-Mexico Border Region: A Qualitative Study. %A Wells KJ %A Gordon JR %A Carrizosa CM %A Mozo EH %A Lucido NC %A Cobian Aguilar RA %A Brady JP %A Rojas SA %A Ramers CB %A Nogg KA %A Fahey KML %A Jones IJ %A Rivera DB %A Blashill AJ %J AIDS Behav %V 28 %N 3 %D 2024 Mar 29 %M 37773474 %F 4.852 %R 10.1007/s10461-023-04185-y %X Latinx men who have sex with men (MSM) are an at-risk population for new HIV diagnoses. Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is a suite of biomedical approaches to prevent HIV infection. Latinx MSM are less likely to take PrEP compared to non-Latinx White MSM. This qualitative study identified interpersonal- and community-level barriers and facilitators of PrEP among young adult Latinx MSM. Using stratified purposeful sampling, 27 Latinx men, ages 19-29 years and living in a US-Mexico border region, completed self-report demographic surveys and participated in semi-structured in-depth interviews assessing barriers and facilitators to PrEP. Directed content analysis was used to identify both a priori and emerging themes. Most participants reported that other people, including peers, friends, partners, and health care providers were both supportive and discouraging of PrEP use. Participants' intersectional identities as members of both Latinx and LGBTQ+ (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer) communities both hindered and facilitated PrEP use.