| Literature DB >> 17166257 |
Lalit Dandona1, Vemu Lakshmi, Talasila Sudha, G Anil Kumar, Rakhi Dandona.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) burden among adults in India is estimated officially by direct extrapolation of annual sentinel surveillance data from public-sector antenatal and sexually transmitted infection (STI) clinics and some high-risk groups. The validity of these extrapolations has not been systematically examined with a large sample population-based study.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2006 PMID: 17166257 PMCID: PMC1764025 DOI: 10.1186/1741-7015-4-31
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Estimation of HIV burden by NACO in people 15–49 years of age in Andhra Pradesh, based on sentinel surveillance data for 2005
| Population category | Sentinel surveillance based calculations by NACO* | ||
| 2005 population (15–49 years) | HIV prevalence† | Number with HIV | |
| Urban men | 6 131 043‡ | 0.0240 | 147 145 |
| Urban women | 5 881 092‡ | 0.0200 | 117 622 |
| Rural men | 14 464 583‡ | 0.0240 | 347 150 |
| Rural women | 14 178 474‡ | 0.0200 | 283 569 |
| Urban men with STI | 391 343§ | 0.2280 | 89 226 |
| Urban women with STI | 340 978§ | 0.1900 | 64 786 |
| Rural men with STI | 972 539§ | 0.2280 | 221 739 |
| Rural women with STI | 870 077§ | 0.1900 | 165 315 |
| Female sex workers | 117 635¶ | 0.1280 | 15 057 |
| Men who have sex with men | 5 082** | 0.0645 | 328 |
| Total | 43 352 845 | 0.0335 | 1 451 937 |
*These calculations carried out by NACO.
†HIV prevalence from the sentinel surveillance of 2005 in Andhra Pradesh applied as follows [2,6]: median HIV prevalence of 2% from 23 antenatal sentinel surveillance clinics at medical colleges or district headquarter hospitals (sample 400 at each clinic, range of HIV prevalence 0.25–3.5%) applied to urban and rural women 15–49 years old, and 20% higher prevalence than this applied to urban and rural men; median HIV prevalence of 22.8% from 11 STI sentinel surveillance clinics mostly at medical colleges or district headquarter hospitals (sample 250 at 10 clinics and 219 at one clinic, range of HIV prevalence 4–32.4%) applied to urban and rural men assumed to get STI annually, and 83.3% of this prevalence applied to urban and rural women assumed to get STI annually; median HIV prevalence of 12.8% from seven sentinel surveillance sites for female sex workers (sample 250 each, range of HIV prevalence 5.2–26.8%); HIV prevalence of 6.45% from one sentinel surveillance site for men who have sex with men (sample 217); the total HIV prevalence of 3.35% in people 15–49 years of age calculated by dividing the total number calculated to have HIV by the total population in this age group.
‡Excludes men and women shown separately in other categories below.
§In this method, 6% urban men and women and 6.3% rural men and women were assumed to get STI annually; this portion was assumed to cover high-risk groups in the population, excluding female sex workers and men who have sex with men, shown separately [3,6].
¶0.55% of urban and rural women 15–49 years of age, comprising that portion of female sex workers not expected to be covered in the STI component of the calculations [6].
**Number of men who have sex with men estimated in Andhra Pradesh who were not expected to be covered in the STI component of the calculations.
Figure 1Locations sampled in Guntur district for the population-based study.
Figure 2Participation profile in the population-based study.
Figure 3Results of laboratory testing for HIV.
Population-based sex and rural/urban prevalence of HIV in Guntur district
| Men | Women | Total | ||||||||
| Participants ( | HIV-positive ( | Adjusted HIV prevalence* (%) | 95% CI (design effect) | Participants ( | HIV-positive ( | Adjusted HIV prevalence* (%) | 95% CI (design effect) | Adjusted HIV prevalence* (%) | 95% CI (design effect) | |
| Rural | 3139 | 54 | 1.57 | 0.86–2.28 (2.36) | 3178 | 50 | 1.71 | 1.18–2.24 (1.43) | 1.64 | 1.10–2.18 (2.86) |
| Western region (Durgi) | 733 | 6 | 0.81 | 763 | 7 | 0.97 | 0.89 | 0.06–1.72 (3.02) | ||
| Central region† | 1527 | 38 | 2.58 | 1543 | 26 | 1.79 | 2.19 | 1.41–2.97 (2.30) | ||
| (Mupalla) | 757 | 21 | 2.73 | 776 | 15 | 2.03 | 2.39 | 1.19–3.59 (2.47) | ||
| (Narsaraopet) | 770 | 17 | 2.43 | 767 | 11 | 1.54 | 1.99 | 0.92–3.06 (2.36) | ||
| Eastern region (Kollur) | 879 | 10 | 1.23 | 872 | 17 | 1.94 | 1.58 | 0.45–2.71 (3.75) | ||
| Urban | 3096 | 76 | 2.11 | 1.50–2.72 (1.37) | 3204 | 61 | 1.67 | 1.22–2.12 (1.04) | 1.89 | 1.39–2.39 (2.13) |
| Guntur | 2358 | 61 | 2.45 | 2443 | 44 | 1.63 | 2.04 | 1.44–2.64 (2.29) | ||
| Narsaraopet | 738 | 15 | 1.91 | 761 | 17 | 1.83 | 1.87 | 0.95–2.79 (1.84) | ||
| Total | 6235 | 130 | 1.74 | 1.27–2.21 (1.80) | 6382 | 111 | 1.70 | 1.36–2.04 (1.21) | 1.72 | 1.35–2.09 (2.44) |
*Adjustments explained in the methods section.
†Central region rural population was represented by Mupalla and Narsaraopet mandals as explained in the methods section.
CI, confidence interval.
Distribution of HIV by standard of living index (SLI) quartiles in the population-based sample
| Men | Women | Men and women | ||||
| SLI quartiles* (score range) | Participants ( | HIV-positive, | Participants ( | HIV-positive, | Participants ( | HIV-positive, |
| Rural | ||||||
| I (up to 16) | 1074 | 18 (1.68) | 1140 | 31 (2.72) | 2214 | 49 (2.21) |
| II (17–22) | 894 | 22 (2.46) | 872 | 11 (1.26) | 1766 | 33 (1.87) |
| III (23–29) | 745 | 9 (1.21) | 733 | 5 (0.68) | 1478 | 14 (0.95) |
| IV (30 or more) | 425 | 5 (1.18) | 433 | 3 (0.69) | 858 | 8 (0.93) |
| Missing data | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | ||
| Total | 3139 | 54 (1.72) | 3178 | 50 (1.57) | 6317 | 104 (1.65) |
| Urban | ||||||
| I (up to 16) | 490 | 29 (5.92) | 565 | 20 (3.54) | 1055 | 49 (4.64) |
| II (17–22) | 699 | 19 (2.72) | 731 | 17 (2.33) | 1430 | 36 (2.52) |
| III (23–29) | 784 | 10 (1.28) | 789 | 12 (1.52) | 1573 | 22 (1.40) |
| IV (30 or more) | 1123 | 18 (1.60) | 1119 | 12 (1.07) | 2242 | 30 (1.34) |
| Total | 3096 | 76 (2.45) | 3204 | 61 (1.90) | 6300 | 137 (2.17) |
| Rural and urban | ||||||
| I (up to 16) | 1564 | 47 (3.01) | 1705 | 51 (2.99) | 3269 | 98 (3.00) |
| II (17–22) | 1593 | 41 (2.57) | 1603 | 28 (1.75) | 3196 | 69 (2.16) |
| III (23–29) | 1529 | 19 (1.24) | 1522 | 17 (1.12) | 3051 | 36 (1.18) |
| IV (30 or more) | 1548 | 23 (1.49) | 1552 | 15 (0.97) | 3100 | 38 (1.23) |
| Missing data | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | ||
| Total | 6235 | 130 (2.09) | 6382 | 111 (1.74) | 12 617 | 241 (1.91) |
*SLI quartiles correspond to the division of score distribution for the total sample into approximately equal quarters. The sizes of quarters ranged between 3051 and 3269 as the scores were whole numbers and each quartile was defined based on the nearest corresponding score. Lower index score corresponds to lower standard of living.
Distribution of HIV by age in the population-based sample
| Men | Women | Men and women | ||||
| Age (years) | Participants ( | HIV-positive, | Participants ( | HIV-positive, | Participants ( | HIV-positive, |
| Rural | ||||||
| 15–19 | 595 | 1 (0.17) | 595 | 8 (1.34) | 1190 | 9 (0.76) |
| 20–24 | 542 | 6 (1.11) | 562 | 9 (1.60) | 1104 | 15 (1.36) |
| 25–29 | 477 | 10 (2.10) | 508 | 12 (2.36) | 985 | 22 (2.23) |
| 30–34 | 412 | 9 (2.18) | 451 | 8 (1.77) | 863 | 17 (1.97) |
| 35–39 | 449 | 13 (2.90) | 451 | 8 (1.77) | 900 | 21 (2.33) |
| 40–44 | 330 | 8 (2.42) | 370 | 4 (1.08) | 700 | 12 (1.71) |
| 45–49 | 334 | 7 (2.10) | 241 | 1 (0.41) | 575 | 8 (1.39) |
| Total | 3139 | 54 (1.72) | 3178 | 50 (1.57) | 6317 | 104 (1.65) |
| Urban | ||||||
| 15–19 | 580 | 2 (0.34) | 564 | 2 (0.35) | 1144 | 4 (0.35) |
| 20–24 | 544 | 10 (1.84) | 600 | 16 (2.67) | 1144 | 26 (2.27) |
| 25–29 | 495 | 8 (1.62) | 519 | 14 (2.70) | 1014 | 22 (2.17) |
| 30–34 | 421 | 24 (5.70) | 435 | 11 (2.53) | 856 | 35 (4.09) |
| 35–39 | 393 | 22 (5.60) | 413 | 9 (2.18) | 806 | 31 (3.85) |
| 40–44 | 298 | 7 (2.35) | 387 | 4 (1.03) | 685 | 11 (1.61) |
| 45–49 | 365 | 3 (0.82) | 286 | 5 (1.75) | 651 | 8 (1.23) |
| Total | 3096 | 76 (2.45) | 3204 | 61 (1.90) | 6300 | 137 (2.17) |
| Rural and urban | ||||||
| 15–19 | 1175 | 3 (0.26) | 1159 | 10 (0.86) | 2334 | 13 (0.56) |
| 20–24 | 1086 | 16 (1.47) | 1162 | 25 (2.15) | 2248 | 41 (1.82) |
| 25–29 | 972 | 18 (1.85) | 1027 | 26 (2.53) | 1999 | 44 (2.20) |
| 30–34 | 833 | 33 (3.96) | 886 | 19 (2.14) | 1719 | 52 (3.03) |
| 35–39 | 842 | 35 (4.16) | 864 | 17 (1.97) | 1706 | 52 (3.05) |
| 40–44 | 628 | 15 (2.39) | 757 | 8 (1.06) | 1385 | 23 (1.66) |
| 45–49 | 699 | 10 (1.43) | 527 | 6 (1.14) | 1226 | 16 (1.31) |
| Total | 6235 | 130 (2.09) | 6382 | 111 (1.74) | 12617 | 241 (1.91) |
Type of antenatal care services used by standard of living index (SLI) quartiles in the population-based sample
| SLI quartiles (score range) | |||||
| Antenatal care services used | Total | I (up to 16), | II (17–22), | III (23–29), | IV (30 or more), |
| Public-sector hospitals* | 152 | 68 (44.7) | 46 (30.3) | 28 (18.4) | 10 (6.6) |
| Other options† | 570 | 144 (25.3) | 140 (24.6) | 159 (27.9) | 127 (22.3) |
| Private health facility | 512 | 112 (21.9) | 121 (23.6) | 153 (29.9) | 126 (24.6) |
| Other public-sector facilities | 14 | 6 (42.9) | 4 (28.6) | 4 (28.6) | 0 |
| Checkup at home | 8 | 7 (87.5) | 1 (12.5) | 0 | 0 |
| No checkup | 36 | 19 (52.8) | 14 (38.9) | 2 (5.6) | 1 (2.8) |
| Data not available | 55 | 15 (27.3) | 24 (43.6) | 11 (20) | 5 (9.1) |
| Total | 777 | 227 (29.2) | 210 (27.0) | 198 (25.5) | 142 (18.3) |
*This category includes public-sector hospitals that are covered by sentinel surveillance.
†This category includes options that are not covered by sentinel surveillance, including small public-sector health facilities such as primary health centres and subcentres.
HIV prevalence by standard of living index (SLI) and type of health services used in the population-based sample
| Type of health services used | SLI halves (score range) | |||
| Lower (up to 22) | Upper (23 or more) | |||
| HIV-positive (%) | HIV-positive (%) | |||
| Antenatal care by women | ||||
| Public-sector hospitals* | 114 | 5 (4.39) | 38 | 1 (2.63) |
| Other† | 284 | 3 (1.06) | 286 | 3 (1.05) |
| Total | 398 | 8 (2.01) | 324 | 4 (1.23) |
| General health services by men‡ | ||||
| Public-sector hospitals* | 325 | 18 (5.54) | 165 | 4 (2.42) |
| Other† | 2831 | 70 (2.47) | 2909 | 38 (1.31) |
| Total | 3156 | 88 (2.79) | 3074 | 42 (1.37) |
| General health services by women‡ | ||||
| Public-sector hospitals* | 516 | 19 (3.68) | 246 | 4 (1.63) |
| Other† | 2792 | 60 (2.15) | 2827 | 28 (0.99) |
| Total | 3308 | 79 (2.39) | 3073 | 32 (1.04) |
*This includes public-sector hospitals covered by sentinel surveillance.
†Other comprises mainly of private sector services, and for antenatal care includes a small proportion of smaller public-sector health facilities not covered by sentinel surveillance (total 14 women).
‡Data on five men and one woman missing for type of general health services used, and data on type of public-sector facility used for general health services not available.
Standard of living index (SLI) distribution of public-sector antenatal clinic attendees
| SLI quartiles* (score range) | Public-sector antenatal clinic attendees | |||||
| Guntur city | Narsaraopet town | |||||
| Rural, | Urban, | Total, | Rural, | Urban, | Total, | |
| I (up to 16) | 125 (53.2) | 108 (42.9) | 233 (47.8) | 181 (58.2) | 47 (51.6) | 228 (56.7) |
| II (17–22) | 69 (29.4) | 87 (34.5) | 156 (32.0) | 63 (20.3) | 21 (23.1) | 84 (20.9) |
| III (23–29) | 30 (12.8) | 49 (19.4) | 79 (16.2) | 49 (15.8) | 19 (20.9) | 68 (16.9) |
| IV (30 or more) | 11 (4.7) | 8 (3.2) | 19 (3.9) | 18 (5.8) | 4 (4.4) | 22 (5.5) |
| Total | 235 (100) | 252 (100) | 487 (100) | 311 (100) | 91 (100) | 402 (100) |
*SLI quartiles based on the distribution of scores in our population-based sample.
Patient referrals to public-sector antenatal clinics
| Public-sector antenatal clinic attendees | ||||||
| Guntur city | Narsaraopet town | |||||
| Rural, | Urban, | Total, | Rural, | Urban, | Total, | |
| Total | 235 (100) | 252 (100) | 487 (100) | 311 (100) | 91 (100) | 402 (100) |
| Visited private health facility previously for this pregnancy | 95 (40.4) | 83 (32.9) | 178 (36.6) | 112 (36.0) | 28 (30.8) | 140 (34.8) |
| Referred by private facility to public-sector hospital for this pregnancy | 37 (15.7) | 16 (6.3) | 53 (10.9) | 63 (20.3) | 8 (8.8) | 71 (17.7) |
Estimation of HIV burden in Guntur district using the two methods
| Population category | Sentinel surveillance method | Population-based study method | ||||
| 2005 population (15–49 years) | HIV prevalence* | Number with HIV | 2005 population (15–49 years) | HIV prevalence† | Number with HIV | |
| Urban men | 370 005‡ | 0.0360 | 13 320 | 373 926†† | 0.0210 | 7 852 |
| Urban women | 366 235‡ | 0.0300 | 10 987 | 378 557‡‡ | 0.0162 | 6 133 |
| Rural men | 848 207‡ | 0.0360 | 30 535 | 873 893§§ | 0.0157 | 13 720 |
| Rural women | 828 055‡ | 0.0300 | 24 842 | 880 365¶¶ | 0.0170 | 14 966 |
| Urban men with STI | 23 526§ | 0.2280 | 5 364 | |||
| Urban women with STI | 21 234§ | 0.1900 | 4 034 | |||
| Rural men with STI | 56 821§ | 0.2280 | 12 955 | |||
| Rural women with STI | 50 815§ | 0.1900 | 9 655 | |||
| Female sex workers | 7 003¶ | 0.1320 | 924 | 9 420*** | 0.1320 | 1 243 |
| Men who have sex with men | 300** | 0.0645 | 19 | |||
| Prisoners: men | 800††† | 0.1050 | 84 | |||
| Hostel residents: men | 5 000‡‡‡ | 0.0420 | 210 | |||
| Hostel residents: women | 5 000‡‡‡ | 0.0324 | 162 | |||
| Undersampled urban men | 14 297§§§ | 0.0420 | 600 | |||
| Undersampled rural men | 30 943§§§ | 0.0314 | 972 | |||
| Total | 2 572 201 | 0.0438 | 112 635 | 2 572 201 | 0.0179 | 45 942¶¶¶ |
*HIV prevalence used in the sentinel surveillance method: HIV prevalence from the antenatal sentinel surveillance of 2005 in Guntur at the medical college clinic applied to urban and rural women 15–49 years old, and 20% higher prevalence than this applied to urban and rural men; 2005 HIV prevalence from the sentinel surveillance STI clinic applied to urban and rural men assumed to get STI annually, and 83.3% of this prevalence applied to urban and rural women assumed to get STI annually; 2005 HIV prevalence from the sentinel sites for female sex workers and men who have sex with men used [6].
†HIV prevalence used in the population-based study method: HIV prevalence for urban and rural men and women used from our population-based study; HIV prevalence in men in prisons assumed as 5 times that in urban men; HIV prevalence in men and women hostel residents assumed as twice the urban prevalence in each sex; HIV prevalence in undersampled urban and rural men assumed as twice the prevalence in sampled urban and rural men.
‡Excludes men and women shown separately in other categories below.
§In this method, 6% urban men and women, and 6.3% rural men and women were assumed to get STI annually; this portion assumed to cover high-risk groups in the population, excluding female sex workers and men who have sex with men, shown separately [3,6].
¶0.55% of urban and rural women comprising that portion of female sex workers not expected to be covered in the STI component of the calculations [6].
**This method estimated 5082 men who have sex with men in Andhra Pradesh who were not expected to be covered in the STI component of the calculations (Table 1); for Guntur district we used the fraction proportional to its 5.9% population contribution to the state.
††Excludes urban men in prisons at a given time, residents of hostels, and undersampled urban men.
‡‡Excludes urban female sex workers estimated not covered in our population-based sample and residents of hostels.
§§Excludes rural men in prisons at a given time and undersampled rural men.
¶¶Excludes rural female sex workers estimated not covered in our population-based sample.
***Our urban and rural women samples included five (0.14%) and four (0.12%) women, respectively, who were identified as sex workers, although other unidentified sex workers would also likely be part of our sample; Guntur district was estimated to have 11000 female sex workers in 2005 [9], 0.86% of women in the 15–49-year age group; based on our previous study of female sex workers in Andhra Pradesh [26,27], we extrapolated that 60% sex workers are in urban areas and 40% in rural areas, suggesting that in Guntur district 6600 sex workers would be urban and 4400 rural; this implied that 6055 urban and 3365 rural sex workers were not represented in our population-based sample, and are therefore shown separately.
††Estimated based on capacity of prisons in Guntur district, and assumed that half the prisoners are urban and half are rural.
‡‡We estimated by performing a census of residential hostels for students and working people in the urban areas of Guntur district that 5000 men and 5000 women 18–29 years old, and 7000 boys and 3500 girls 15–17 years old, would be residing in these hostels. The younger age group comprises of students mostly in strictly supervised residential schools, and therefore, their risk of HIV was considered similar to that in the general population; the 18–29-year age group comprises of college students and working people living mostly without any supervision, and therefore, the HIV prevalence for them was considered twice the urban prevalence for each sex. As the estimated number in this latter category was the same for men and women, and in India more young men than women would be expected to be living alone or with others of the same sex, we assessed our sample for the number of 18–29-year-old men and women living alone or with others of the same sex outside the hostel setting and found 76 men (5.8% of urban men sample in this age group) and 14 (1% of urban women sample in this age group) in this category.
§§§Our population-based sample had 3.7% and 3.5% undersampling of urban and rural men, respectively, compared with their ratio to women in the Census data [23]; we considered this undersampled group separately, after excluding prisoners, assuming that these missing men would be at higher risk of HIV.
¶¶¶Some other groups considered at relatively high risk of HIV, men who have sex with men (including men who sell sex to men), intravenous drug users, and migrant labourers, were not added separately to this calculation for the following reasons. (i) Our population-based sample had 2.1% men who reported having had sex with men, which included 0.26% men who had sold sex to men. In our previous study of 6661 men who had sex with men recruited through extensive snowball sampling in 13 districts of Andhra Pradesh 26.7% had sold sex to men [28,29], which was 0.015% of 15–49-year-old men in these 13 districts; this fraction was 17 times less than the fraction of 0.26% in our population-based sample. The latter would seem to be an adequate representation of this group in our sample if we conservatively assume that we had actually reached only 1/17th of the actual men who sell sex to men in our extensive snowball sampling method in the 13-district study. (ii) The number of intravenous drug users is considered to be negligible in Andhra Pradesh. (iii) We estimated that our stratified random sampling strategy, which had adequate coverage of lower socioeconomic strata, would include migrant labourers residing in the sampled areas for 6 months or more according to their proportion in the population; even if this were not completely so, the addition of undersampled men with assumed higher HIV prevalence to the calculation, as mentioned above, would cover this group.
Methods and findings from studies comparing population-based and sentinel surveillance antenatal HIV prevalence in India.
| Location [Reference] | Data collection year(s) | Sampling approach | Participation rate | Sample size ( | Number of HIV-positive | Population HIV prevalence as % (95% CI)* | Power of sample size to detect difference from antenatal HIV prevalence at 95% confidence level† | Comments |
| Tamil Nadu: 3 districts [7] | 1998 | 90 rural & urban clusters selected using probability proportional to size; selected households from each cluster invited for medical camp; first 25 adults 15–45 years old from each cluster who came to camp included in study | 82.5% for selected households; not mentioned for eligible individuals | 1981 | 34 | Age & sex adjusted: 1.80 (0.89–2.71) | 17% to detect 20% difference from 1% antenatal HIV prevalence | Selection bias likely due to medical camp sampling approach, making interpretation difficult; |
| Tamil Nadu: 1 rural sub-district, 1 urban town [8] | 1999–2000 | 120 rural & urban clusters selected using probability proportional to size; 15–40 years old people from randomly selected households included in study | 90.9% of 3–40-year-olds; not mentioned for eligible 15–40-year-olds | 2870 | 29 | Crude: 1.01 (0.44–1.58) | 21% to detect 20% difference from 1% antenatal HIV prevalence | Grossly underpowered for reliable comparison with antenatal HIV prevalence |
| Karnataka: 1 district [31,32] | 2003 | 10 villages and 20 urban blocks selected with cluster sampling using probability proportional to size; 15–49-year-olds included in study; further details not published | 59.8% of 6700 eligible 15–49-year-olds | 4008 | 118 | Crude: 2.94 (2.12–3.76) | 50% to detect 20% difference from 2.6% antenatal HIV prevalence | Poor participation rate makes interpretation difficult; |
| Andhra Pradesh: 1 district [This study] | 2004–2005 | 5 subdistricts selected to represent strata in district, from which 66 rural & urban clusters selected randomly; 15–49-year-olds from randomly selected households included in study | 91.2% of 13838 eligible 15–49-year-olds | 12617 | 241 | Age, sex & rural-urban adjusted: 1.72 (1.35–2.09) | 93% to detect 20% difference from 3% antenatal HIV prevalence | Adequately powered for reliable comparison with antenatal HIV prevalence |
*Although the two Tamil Nadu papers reported adjusting for cluster design effect, the magnitude of this effect was not reported, and the confidence intervals reported in both these papers are implausibly narrow even if no design effect were considered (cluster design effect widens the confidence interval). The Karnataka study did not report design effect information. Because specific details about cluster design effect in these studies were not available, we used the cluster design effect of 2.44 from our study to calculate the confidence intervals for the other studies, using standard statistical methods [12,24]
†Power calculated assuming cluster design effect of 2.44 for all studies, using standard statistical methods [12,13]; sentinel surveillance antenatal HIV prevalence for comparison as reported in each study.