| Literature DB >> 26120594 |
Stephen M Weiss, Robert Zulu, Deborah L Jones, Colleen A Redding, Ryan Cook, Ndashi Chitalu.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Widespread voluntary medical male circumcision in Africa could avert an estimated 3·436 million HIV infections and 300,000 deaths over the next 10 years. Most Zambian men have expressed little interest in the procedure. We tested the effect of the Spear and Shield intervention designed to increase demand for voluntary medical male circumcision among these hard-to-reach men.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26120594 PMCID: PMC4478609 DOI: 10.1016/S2352-3018(15)00042-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lancet HIV ISSN: 2352-3018 Impact factor: 12.767
Figure 1Participant Flow Diagram
Demographic characteristics of N = 800 Spear & Shield participants, compared between Experimental and Control conditions and between those who underwent VMMC and those who did not (n = 785 with confirmed VMMC status).
| Characteristic | All (N = 800) Mean(sd) n(%) | Experimental group (n = 400) | Control group (n = 400) | t, | Underwent VMMC (n = 257) | Did not undergo VMMC (n = 528) | t, |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||
| Age (years) | 27(9) | 27(9) | 27(9) | 0·02, .9805 | 26(8) | 28(9) | 2·32, ·0205 |
|
| |||||||
| Employment status | 3·38, .0659 | 4·16, ·0413 | |||||
| Employed | 390(49%) | 208(52%) | 182(46%) | 111(43%) | 269(51%) | ||
| Unemployed | 410(51%) | 192(48%) | 218(54%) | 146(57%) | 259(49%) | ||
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| |||||||
| Annual Income | 0·05, ·8317 | 0·05, ·8238 | |||||
| ≥ 500 ZMK (~$100) | 377(47%) | 187(47%) | 190(48%) | 120(47%) | 251(48%) | ||
| < 500 ZMK | 423(53%) | 213(53%) | 210(52%) | 137(53%) | 277(52%) | ||
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| Education level | 0·20, ·6549 | 11·07, ·0009 | |||||
| ≥ 12 years of education | 526(66%) | 266(67%) | 260(65%) | 190(74%) | 327(62%) | ||
| < 12 years of education | 274(34%) | 134(33%) | 140(35%) | 67(26%) | 201(38%) | ||
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| Relationship status | 1·65, ·1983 | 3·24, ·0718 | |||||
| Married or cohabitating | 342(43%) | 180(45%) | 162(41%) | 97(38%) | 235(45%) | ||
| Not married/Not living with partner | 458(57%) | 220(55%) | 238(59%) | 160(62%) | 293(55%) | ||
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| Children | 1·52, ·2170 | 2·40, ·1214 | |||||
| At least one child | 309(39%) | 163(41%) | 146(37%) | 88(34%) | 211(40%) | ||
| No children | 491(61%) | 237(59%) | 254(63%) | 169(66%) | 317(60%) | ||
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| Desire for (more) children | 0·25, ·6177 | 1·50, ·2202 | |||||
| Yes | 349(44%) | 178(45%) | 171(43%) | 103(40%) | 236(45%) | ||
| No | 451(56%) | 222(55%) | 229(27%) | 154(60%) | 292(55%) | ||
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| Baseline readiness for VMMC | 3·59, ·1662 | 20·17, <·0001 | |||||
| Precontemplation | 431(54%) | 207(52%) | 224(56%) | 112(44%) | 312(59%) | ||
| Contemplation | 270(34%) | 135(34%) | 135(34%) | 100(39%) | 167(32%) | ||
| Preparation | 99(12%) | 58(15%) | 41(10%) | 45(17%) | 49(9%) | ||
Note: VMMC = Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision
Figure 2Kaplan-Meier Cumulative Incidence of VMMC
Multivariable logistic regression analysis of factors influencing VMMC
| Factor | aOR | 95% CI (aOR) | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Study condition | |||
| Experimental vs. Control (Ref) | 2·451 | (1·236, 4·359) | ·0166 |
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| Readiness for VMMC | |||
| Preparation vs. Precontemplation (Ref) | 2·185 | (1·266, 3·769) | ·0050 |
| Contemplation vs. Precontemplation (Ref) | 1·243 | (0·836, 1·848) | ·2814 |
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| |||
| Employment status | ·0828 | ||
| Employed vs. Unemployed (Ref) | 0·718 | (0·494, 1·044) | |
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| Education level | ·0026 | ||
| Higher education vs. Lower education (Ref) | 1·829 | (1·235, 2·710) | |
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| Age (5 year increase) | 0·935 | (0·831, 1·053) | ·2686 |
Note: VMMC = Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision; aOR = Adjusted Odds Ratio; Ref = Reference group for odds ratio comparisons
Figure 3Changes in condom use among participants reporting sex in the month preceding post-VMMC assessment (n = 152)