| Literature DB >> 10159889 |
P Setel1.
Abstract
Concern has been expressed about the fertility of people infected with HIV: the worry has been that on learning of their condition, HIV-affected individuals may attempt to accomplish unmet reproductive goals knowing that they will not live a normal life span. This article addresses the potential effects of AIDS on fertility and reproductive decisions in East and Central Africa. The problem is seen in terms of a tightly knit continuum of biological, epidemiologic and cultural contexts, and the prevailing conditions of response to the epidemic. AIDS can influence fertility among individuals and groups regardless of any awareness of serostatus by increasing death rates among reproductive populations, and damaging the physical capacities of infected men and women to reproduce. In much of the region, high prevalence of STDs may simultaneously impair the fertility of men and women and increase their risk of contracting HIV. These biological conditions are compounded among those for whom fertility is a highly valued marker of adult status, where the social and economic marginality of young women contributes to reliance on commercialized sex, where the mobility of young men leads to instability in sexual partnerships and frequent partner change, or where women lack the ability to negotiate their fertility with spouses. It appears that even focused programs of testing and counselling with HIV-positive women in Europe and in Africa have not motivated a significant change in reproductive action. Were there a demonstrable effect of counselling on the fertility choices of infected persons, there are numerous practical limitations on the role that interventions can play in affecting the fertility of HIV-positive people.Entities:
Keywords: Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome; Africa; Africa South Of The Sahara; Behavior; Decision Making; Demographic Factors; Developing Countries; Diseases; Eastern Africa; Excess Mortality; Fertility; Fertility Preferences; Hiv Infections; Literature Review; Middle Africa; Mortality; Population; Population Dynamics; Reproductive Behavior; Viral Diseases
Mesh:
Year: 1995 PMID: 10159889
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Transit Rev ISSN: 1036-4005