| Literature DB >> 23738058 |
Sara J Newmann1, Kavita Mishra, Maricianah Onono, Elizabeth A Bukusi, Craig R Cohen, Olivia Gage, Rose Odeny, Katie D Schwartz, Daniel Grossman.
Abstract
Objective. To inform an intervention integrating family planning into HIV care, family planning (FP) knowledge, attitudes and practices, and perspectives on integrating FP into HIV care were assessed among healthcare providers in Nyanza Province, Kenya. Methods. Thirty-one mixed-method, structured interviews were conducted among a purposive sample of healthcare workers (HCWs) from 13 government HIV care facilities in Nyanza Province. Structured questions and case scenarios assessed contraceptive knowledge, training, and FP provision experience. Open-ended questions explored perspectives on integration. Data were analyzed descriptively and qualitatively. Results. Of the 31 HCWs interviewed, 45% reported previous FP training. Few providers thought long-acting methods were safe for HIV-positive women (19% viewed depot medroxyprogesterone acetate as safe and 36% viewed implants and intrauterine contraceptives as safe); fewer felt comfortable recommending them to HIV-positive women. Overall, providers supported HIV and family planning integration, yet several potential barriers were identified including misunderstandings about contraceptive safety, gendered power differentials relating to fertility decisions, staff shortages, lack of FP training, and contraceptive shortages. Conclusions. These findings suggest the importance of considering issues such as patient flow, provider burden, commodity supply, gender and cultural issues affecting FP use, and provider training in FP/HIV when designing integrated FP/HIV services in high HIV prevalence areas.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23738058 PMCID: PMC3659431 DOI: 10.1155/2013/915923
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1240
Demographics and clinical context of HIV care providers (N = 31).
| Clinical experience | |
| Age in years (median, range) | 33 (30–35) |
| Clinicians (clinical officers or nurses) | 18 (58%) |
| Community clinic health assistants | 13 (42%) |
| Number of years worked as provider (median, range) | 3 (1–26) |
| Number of years worked in HIV care (median, range) | 1 (1–11) |
| Clinical site for family planning availability | |
| Worked at sub-district or district hospital | 15 (48%) |
| Worked at site where condoms were available | 24 (80%) |
| Worked at site where at least one nonbarrier method was available [OCP's, DMPA, implants, or IUC] | 17 (57%) |
| Worked at site where implants or IUC was available | 8 (26%) |
| Family planning training | |
| Received training in family planning outside of school, during the past two years | 14 (45%) |
| Desires additional family planning training | 19 (61%) |
OCP: oral contraceptive pills.
DMPA: depot medroxyprogesterone acetate.
IUC: intrauterine contraception.
Figure 1Contraceptive safety knowledge and recommendation of contraceptive methods among HIV care providers in Nyanza Province, Kenya (N = 31).