| Literature DB >> 25488170 |
Mitzy Gafos1, Robert Pool, Misiwe Adelaide Mzimela, Hlengiwe Beauty Ndlovu, Sheena McCormack, Jonathan Elford.
Abstract
The ways in which couples communicate about microbicides is likely to influence microbicide uptake and usage. We collected quantitative data about whether women in a microbicide trial discussed microbicides with their partners and explored communication about microbicides during 79 in-depth-interviews with women enrolled in the trial and 17 focus-group discussions with community members. After 4 weeks in the trial, 60 % of 1092 women had discussed microbicides with their partners; in multivariate analysis, this was associated with younger age, clinic of enrolment and not living in households that owned cattle. After 52 weeks, 84 % of women had discussed microbicides; in multivariate analysis, this was associated with not living in households that owned cattle, not living in a household that relied on the cheapest water source, allocation to 0.5 % PRO2000 gel and consistent gel adherence. Qualitative findings highlighted that women in committed relationships were expected to discuss microbicides with their partners and preferred to use microbicides with their partner's knowledge. Women had different reasons for, and ways of, discussing microbicides and these were influenced by the couple's decision-making roles. Although there was tolerance for the use of microbicides without a partner's knowledge, the women who used microbicides secretly appeared to be women who were least able to discuss microbicides. In KwaZulu-Natal, socio-cultural norms informing sexual communication are amenable to microbicide introduction.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25488170 PMCID: PMC4415949 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-014-0965-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165
Demographics of IDI and FGD participants
| Trial IDIs | Community FGDs (female) | Community FGDs (male) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| No of people | 79 | 54 | 103 |
| No of FGDs | – | 6 | 11 |
| Mean age (range) | 34 (19–64) | 37 (21–63) | 30 (17–67) |
| Employed (%) | 18 | 13 | 5 |
| Married (%)a | 24 | 41 | 14 |
aMarital status was ascertained from the IDI & FGD narratives
Individual characteristics of women who discussed gel use with their partner compared to women who did not discuss gel use at week 4
| Characteristics | N (%) (col %) | Not discussed N (row %) | Discussed N (row %) | χ2
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1092 (100 %) | 441 (40 %) | 651 (60 %) | ||
| Age | ||||
| 18–24 year olds | 309 (28 %) | 110 (36 %) | 199 (64 %) | 0.058 |
| 25–34 year olds | 224 (21 %) | 85 (38 %) | 139 (62 %) | |
| 35–44 year olds | 265 (24 %) | 111 (42 %) | 154 (58 %) | |
| 45+ year olds | 294 (27 %) | 135 (46 %) | 159 (54 %) | |
| Mean age (SD)a | 35.0 (11.65) | 36.2 (11.49) | 34.2 (11.70) | 0.007 |
| Educational level | ||||
| Primary or lower | 535 (49 %) | 228 (43 %) | 307 (57 %) | 0.141 |
| Secondary or higher | 557 (51 %) | 213 (38 %) | 344 (62 %) | |
| Employment status | ||||
| Employed | 184 (17 %) | 81 (44 %) | 103 (56 %) | 0.270 |
| Unemployed | 908 (83 %) | 360 (40 %) | 548 (60 %) | |
| Head of household | ||||
| Partner | 472 (43 %) | 208 (44 %) | 264 (56 %) | 0.090 |
| Parent/in-law | 391 (36 %) | 142 (36 %) | 249 (64 %) | |
| Self | 116 (11 %) | 50 (43 %) | 66 (57 %) | |
| Other | 113 (10 %) | 41 (36 %) | 72 (64 %) | |
| Area of residency | ||||
| Rural | 857 (78 %) | 353 (41 %) | 504 (59 %) | 0.300 |
| Peri-urban/urban | 235 (22 %) | 88 (37 %) | 147 (63 %) | |
| Religion | ||||
| Zionist | 507 (46 %) | 202 (40 %) | 305 (60 %) | 0.882 |
| Shembe | 238 (22 %) | 104 (39 %) | 161 (61 %) | |
| Christian-mainstream | 265 (24 %) | 101 (42 %) | 137 (58 %) | |
| Other | 82 (8 %) | 34 (42 %) | 48 (58 %) | |
| Clinic of enrolment | ||||
| Clinic 1—township | 419 (39 %) | 191 (46 %) | 228 (54 %) | 0.019 |
| Clinic 2—town | 353 (32 %) | 128 (36 %) | 225 (64 %) | |
| Clinic 3—tribal authority | 320 (29 %) | 122 (38 %) | 198 (62 %) | |
| Previous MDP participationb | ||||
| No | 1040 (95.5 %) | 425 (41 %) | 615 (59 %) | 0.086 |
| Yes | 49 (4.5 %) | 14 (29 %) | 35 (71 %) | |
a t test
bThree missing values
Socio-economic characteristics of women who discussed gel use with their partner compared to women who did not discuss gel use at week 4
| Characteristics | N (%) (col %) | Not discussed N (row %) | Discussed N (row %) | χ2
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1092 (100 %) | 441 (40 %) | 651 (60 %) | ||
| Water source | ||||
| Inside house/yard | 333 (30 %) | 127 (38 %) | 206 (62 %) | 0.026 |
| Community source | 599 (55 %) | 234 (39 %) | 365 (61 %) | |
| Free flowing | 160 (15 %) | 80 (50 %) | 80 (50 %) | |
| Fuel for cooking | ||||
| Electricity | 364 (33 %) | 143 (39 %) | 221 (34 %) | 0.856 |
| Gas | 88 (8 %) | 39 (44 %) | 49 (56 %) | |
| Paraffin | 139 (13 %) | 57 (41 %) | 82 (59 %) | |
| Wood | 501 (46 %) | 202 (40 %) | 299 (60 %) | |
| Household ownership (yes) | ||||
| Cattle | 298 (27 %) | 137 (46 %) | 161 (54 %) | 0.021 |
| Electricity | 542 (50 %) | 206 (38 %) | 336 (62 %) | 0.112 |
| Radio | 954 (87 %) | 385 (40 %) | 569 (60 %) | 0.960 |
| Television | 473 (43 %) | 182 (38 %) | 291 (62 %) | 0.262 |
| Telephone | 973 (89 %) | 387 (40 %) | 586 (60 %) | 0.240 |
| Fridge | 569 (52 %) | 219 (38 %) | 350 (62 %) | 0.183 |
| Bicycle | 181 (17 %) | 68 (38 %) | 113 (62 %) | 0.398 |
Sexual behaviour characteristics of women who discussed gel use with their partner compared to women who did not discuss gel use at week 4
| Characteristics | N (col %) | Not Discussed N (row %) | Discussed N (row %) | χ2
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1092 (100 %) | 441 (40 %) | 651 (60 %) | ||
| Contraceptive use at week 4 | ||||
| No | 403 (37 %) | 180 (45 %) | 223 (55 %) | 0.027 |
| Yes | 689 (63 %) | 261 (38 %) | 428 (62 %) | |
| Average sex in last week | ||||
| 3 or less | 502 (46 %) | 217 (43 %) | 285 (57 %) | 0.066 |
| 4–6 | 316 (29 %) | 129 (41 %) | 187 (59 %) | |
| 7 or more | 274 (25 %) | 95 (35 %) | 179 (65 %) | |
| Condom use in last week/4 weeks | ||||
| Always | 581 (53 %) | 221 (38 %) | 360 (62 %) | 0.092 |
| Never/sometimes | 511 (47 %) | 220 (43 %) | 291 (57 %) | |
| Gel use in last week/4 weeks | ||||
| Always | 1065 (98 %) | 428 (40 %) | 637 (60 %) | 0.405 |
| Never/sometimes | 27 (2 %) | 13 (48 %) | 14 (52 %) | |
| Gel group | ||||
| 0.5 % | 388 (36 %) | 148 (38 %) | 240 (62 %) | 0.361 |
| 2 % PRO 2000 | 325 (30 %) | 141 (43 %) | 184 (57 %) | |
| Placebo | 379 (35 %) | 152 (40 %) | 227 (60 %) | |
| Impact on sexual pleasure | ||||
| Increased | 813 (74 %) | 336 (41 %) | 477 (59 %) | 0.278 |
| Same/less | 279 (26 %) | 105 (38 %) | 174 (62 %) | |
Multivariate model comparing women who discussed gel use with their partner to women who did not discuss gel use at week 4
| Adjusted odds ratio (95 % CI) |
| |
|---|---|---|
| Age (mean) | 0.98 (0.97, 0.99) | 0.006 |
| Clinic of enrolment | ||
| Clinic 1 | 1.00 | |
| Clinic 2 | 1.54 (1.14, 2,07) | 0.005 |
| Clinic 3 | 1.32 (0.97, 1.80) | 0.076 |
| Water source | ||
| Inside house/yard | 1.00 | |
| Community source | 1.01 (0.76, 1.36) | 0.925 |
| Free flowing | 0.70 (0.48, 1.03) | 0.074 |
| Household ownership of cattle | ||
| No | 1.00 | |
| Yes | 0.72 (0.55, 0.95) | 0.021 |