Intimate Partner Violence Among Hiv Serodiscordant Couples In Durban, South Africa

Intimate Partner Violence Among Hiv Serodiscordant Couples In Durban, South Africa

Author: Andrew Tomita

Publisher:

Published: 2017

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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Background: South Africa has a high prevalence rate of intimate partner violence (IPV) and HIV, which can be further exacerbated by HIV serodiscordancy in the couple dyad. Further exploration of the discordancy sidedness in known mediating factors, such as alcohol abuse risk and post-traumatic stress, are also required. This paper aimed to investigate the extent of and gender differences in IPV, alcohol abuse risk and posttraumatic stress symptoms among HIV serodiscordant couples in Durban, South Africa, and to further analyze this with respect to female HIV serostatus.Methods: A cross-sectional analysis of the data was conducted on 30 serodiscordant couples at the point of enrolment into a pilot study of an HIV risk reduction intervention. The statistical procedure for a dependent small sample was applied to examine gender differences in IPV, alcohol use and posttraumatic stress symptoms among HIV serodiscordant couples.Results: Of the 30 serodiscordant couples enrolled, the women were HIV positive in 18 (60%). The IPV exposure between men (28.57%) and women (89.29%) was significantly different (Proportionaldifference = -0.61, 95% CI: -0.82 to -0.39). Posttraumatic stress symptoms scores between men (Mdn=22; IQR=23) and women (Mdn=44; IQR=28) were significantly different, based on the Wilcoxon signed-rank test (p=0.03). When the above analysis was stratified by female HIV serostatus, we found significant gender differences in IPV and post-traumatic stress in the couples where the female was HIV positive. However, there was a significant gender difference only in IPV where the female was HIV negative. There were no significant gender differences for alcohol abuse risk.Conclusions: The findings demonstrated high levels of IPV in HIV serodiscordant couples, and significant gender difference in mental health risk (i.e. post-traumatic stress) in such relationships, particularly where the woman was HIV positive. HIV intervention programs should address gender-based violence and inequity among heterosexual couples.


Association Between HIV Testing Behavior and Demographic Factors, Risk Perception, and HIV Knowledge Among Guatemalan Women

Association Between HIV Testing Behavior and Demographic Factors, Risk Perception, and HIV Knowledge Among Guatemalan Women

Author: Lisa G. Nichols

Publisher:

Published: 2016

Total Pages: 72

ISBN-13:

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The objective of this study was to determine the factors associated with HIV testing behaviors among Guatemalan women using data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) 2008 – 2009 National Health Survey in Guatemala. A total of 16,819 women from the larger sample of 23,905 participants (men and women), aged 15 – 49 years were surveyed using a household, interviewer-administered questionnaire. The survey collected self-reported data on fertility, family planning use, young adult reproductive health and practices, HIV/AIDS knowledge and risk behaviors, history of sexually transmitted infections, nutrition, infant health and mortality, and domestic violence. In the current study, I reported HIV testing behavior, and determined association with demographic factors, risk perception, and HIV knowledge. Significant associations were found between age, HIV knowledge, education, risk perception, marital status, ethnicity, employment, and HIV testing behaviors. The study findings suggest that there has been a shift in HIV testing policy to prioritize indigenous women. It is recommended that HIV prevention campaigns in Guatemala continue to prioritize this group and expand efforts to promote testing among older women. Sustained HIV risk monitoring and access to testing services in indigenous communities are needed.


Home Visits During Pregnancy Enhance Male Partner HIV Counseling and Testing in Kenya

Home Visits During Pregnancy Enhance Male Partner HIV Counseling and Testing in Kenya

Author: Alfred Onyango Osoti

Publisher:

Published: 2013

Total Pages: 21

ISBN-13:

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HIV testing of male partners of pregnant women is important to decrease HIV transmission to women and to support HIV-infected women in taking prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission (PMTCT) interventions. However, it has been difficult to access male partners in antenatal care (ANC) settings. We hypothesized that home visits to male partners of women attending ANC would be feasible and would increase HIV testing of partners. Pregnant women attending ANC were enrolled, interviewed using smartphone audio-computer assisted self-interviews (ACASI), and randomized to home visits or written invitations for male partners to come to clinic. Enrolled men were interviewed (ACASI) and offered couples HIV counseling and testing (CHCT). Participants underwent follow-up ACASI six weeks post-enrollment. Prevalence of CHCT, male HIV, couple discordance, intimate partner violence were compared using intent-to-treat analysis. Results Among 495 women screened, 312 (63.0%) were eligible, of whom 300 were randomized to clinic-based or home-based HCT. Median age was 22 years [interquartile range (IQR) 20,26]; most were monogamous (87%) and 11% reported condom use and did not differ between trial arms. Male CHCT was substantially and significantly higher in the home-visit than the clinic-invitation arm (87% vs. 36%, p


Evaluating the Efficiency of Community-based HIV Testing and Counseling Strategies in Sub-Saharan Africa

Evaluating the Efficiency of Community-based HIV Testing and Counseling Strategies in Sub-Saharan Africa

Author: Monisha Sharma

Publisher:

Published: 2016

Total Pages: 208

ISBN-13:

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Knowledge of one’s HIV status is vital to accessing treatment and prevention yet only a fraction of individuals in sub-Saharan Africa are regularly tested for HIV. Community-based HIV testing and counseling (HTC), defined as HTC conducted outside of a healthcare facility, has the potential to achieve high population testing coverage and linkage to care. The studies within this dissertation describe effectiveness and efficiency (cost-effectiveness) of various modalities of community-based HTC. Aim 1 presents a systematic review of community and facility-based HTC strategies in sub-Saharan Africa. Aims 2 and 3 evaluate the cost-effectiveness of two types of community HTC interventions in western Kenya by incorporating primary cost and effectiveness data from randomized clinical trials into an HIV mathematical model. Specifically, Aim 2 assesses the health and economic impact of implementing a home-based partner education and HIV testing (HOPE) intervention for pregnant women and their male partners. Aim 3 evaluates the cost-effectiveness of scaling up provider notification services for sexual partners of recently diagnosed HIV-positive persons. In Aim 1, we found that community HTC (including home, mobile, partner notification, key populations, campaign, workplace and self-testing) successfully reached target groups (men, young adults and first-time testers) with higher coverage than facility HTC. Community HTC also identifies HIV-positive individuals at higher CD4 counts who were likely to be earlier in their disease course. Combined with the potential of community HTC with facilitated linkage to achieve high linkage to treatment with similar retention rates as facility HTC, this suggests that scaling up community interventions can reduce the morbidity, mortality and transmission associated with late or non-initiation of ART. Of all modalities examined, home HTC attained the highest population coverage (70%, 95% CI = 58–79) while mobile HTC reached the highest proportion of men (50%, 95% CI = 47–54%). Self-testing reached the highest proportion of young adults (66%, 95% CI = 65–67%). As each HTC modality reaches distinct sub-populations, a combination of modalities (differing by setting) will likely be needed to achieve high ART coverage. In Aim 2, we found that the incremental cost of adding the HOPE intervention to standard antenatal care was $31-37 USD per couple tested; task shifting intervention responsibilities to community health workers lowered the cost to $14-16 USD per couple tested. At 60% coverage of male partners, HOPE was projected to avert 6,987 HIV infections and 2,603 deaths in Nyanza province over 10 years with an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of $886 and $615 per DALY averted for the program and task-shifting scenario, respectively. The ICERs are below the threshold of Kenya’s per capita gross domestic product ($1,358) and are therefore considered cost-effective. We conclude that the HOPE intervention can cost-effectively decrease HIV-associated morbidity and mortality in western Kenya by linking HIV-positive male partners to care. In Aim 3, we found that implementing assisted partner services (aPS) or active tracing, exposure notification, and home HTC for sexual partners of newly diagnosed HIV-positive persons in western Kenya is projected to achieve 12% population coverage and reduce HIV infections by by 2.8% and HIV-related deaths by 1.5%. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of implementing aPS is $1,703 USD (range $1,198-2,887) per disability-adjusted life year (DALY) averted. Task-shifting intervention activities from healthcare professionals to community health workers decreases the ICER to $1,302 (range $955-2,789) per DALY averted. The task-shifting scenario falls below Kenya’s per capita gross domestic product (GDP) and is therefore considered very cost-effective while the full program cost scenario is considered cost-effective under the higher threshold of 3-times Kenya’s per capita GDP. Intervention cost-effectiveness and HIV-related deaths averted among aPS partners increased with expanded ART initiation criteria. We hope that this dissertation work will be useful in forming policy deliberations regarding implementation of community HTC in countries of sub-Saharan Africa.