| Literature DB >> 27631367 |
Elona Toska1,2, Lucie D Cluver3,4, Mark E Boyes5, Maya Isaacsohn6, Rebecca Hodes7, Lorraine Sherr8.
Abstract
Social protection can reduce HIV-risk behavior in general adolescent populations, but evidence among HIV-positive adolescents is limited. This study quantitatively tests whether social protection is associated with reduced unprotected sex among 1060 ART-eligible adolescents from 53 government facilities in South Africa. Potential social protection included nine 'cash/cash-in-kind' and 'care' provisions. Analyses tested interactive/additive effects using logistic regressions and marginal effects models, controlling for covariates. 18 % of all HIV-positive adolescents and 28 % of girls reported unprotected sex. Lower rates of unprotected sex were associated with access to school (OR 0.52 95 % CI 0.33-0.82 p = 0.005), parental supervision (OR 0.54 95 % CI 0.33-0.90 p = 0.019), and adolescent-sensitive clinic care (OR 0.43 95 % CI 0.25-0.73 p = 0.002). Gender moderated the effect of adolescent-sensitive clinic care. Combination social protection had additive effects amongst girls: without any provisions 49 % reported unprotected sex; with 1-2 provisions 13-38 %; and with all provisions 9 %. Combination social protection has the potential to promote safer sex among HIV-positive adolescents, particularly girls.Entities:
Keywords: HIV-positive adolescents; Secondary prevention; Social protection; South Africa; Unprotected sex
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27631367 PMCID: PMC5565649 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-016-1539-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165
Logistic regression of all social protection provisions and covariates
| Factors | OR (95 % CI) | p |
|---|---|---|
| Outcome: unprotected sex (full sample of HIV-positive adolescents n = 1060) | ||
| Age | 1.644 (1.476–1.830) | ≤.001 |
| Gender | 5.727 (3.339–9.824) | ≤.001 |
| Informal housing | .927 (.532–1.614) | .788 |
| Rural residence | 1.447 (.865–2.422) | .159 |
| Maternal orphan | .596 (.331–1.074) | .085 |
| Paternal orphan | .711 (.451–1.121) | .142 |
| Lives with biological caregiver | .737 (.408–1.332) | .312 |
| Knows own HIV-positive status | .956 (.476–1.921) | .900 |
| Mode of infection—horizontal | 1.272 (.778–2.079) | .337 |
| Cash-in-kind—past-week food security | .778 (.459–1.318) | .351 |
| Cash-in-kind—access to school | .523 (.333–.823) | .005 |
| Cash-in-kind—clothing | 1.051 (.638–1.733) | .844 |
| Care—positive parenting | 1.471 (.936–2.314) | .095 |
| Care—parental supervision | .544 (.327–.904) | .019 |
| Care—HIV support group | 1.472 (.828–2.616) | .188 |
| Care—adolescent-sensitive clinic care | .429 (.254–.726) | .002 |
Fig. 1Effects of adolescent-sensitive clinic care by gender
Gender-disaggregated logistic regressions of social protection provisions and covariates
| Factors | Unprotected sex (HIV-positive adolescent girls) | Unprotected sex (HIV-positive adolescent boys) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OR (95 % CI) | p | OR (95 % CI) | p | |
| Age | 1.667 (1.474–1.887) | ≤.001 | 1.559 (1.228–1.979) | ≤.001 |
| Informal housing | .878 (.474–1.626) | .679 | 1.168 (.287–4.759) | .828 |
| Rural residence | 1.537 (.854–2.766) | .152 | 1.030 (.291–3.646) | .964 |
| Maternal orphan | .450 (.221–.917) | .028 | 1.483 (.446–4.932) | .520 |
| Paternal orphan | .761 (.451–1.285) | .307 | .582 (.204–1.660) | .312 |
| Caregiving arrangement | .654 (.321–1.330) | .241 | .958 (.269–3.407) | .947 |
| Mode of infection—horizontal | 1.402 (.793–2.479) | .245 | 1.033 (.360–2.967) | .952 |
| Knows own HIV-positive status | 1.152 (.516–2.571) | .729 | .627 (.142–2.770) | .538 |
| Cash-in-kind—past-week food security | .868 (.474–1.590) | .648 | .629 (.185–2.137) | .458 |
| Cash-in-kind—access to school | .489 (.290–.823) | .007 | .638 (.228–1.789) | .393 |
| Cash-in-kind—clothing | .958 (.535–1.717) | .886 | 1.195 (.398–3.582) | .751 |
| Care—parental supervision | .542 (.300–.982) | .043 | .606 (.207–1.778) | .362 |
| Care—positive parenting | 1.616 (.958–2.725) | .072 | 1.019 (.370–2.809) | .971 |
| Care—HIV support group | 1.512 (.764–2.992) | .236 | 1.622 (.521–5.049) | .404 |
| Care—adolescent-sensitive clinic care | .317 (.174–.579) | ≤.001 | 3.598 (.428–30.229) | .238 |
Fig. 2Marginal effects model testing for additive effects of combination social protections on unprotected sex among HIV-positive adolescents
Socio-demographic characteristics of the sample by gender
| Factor grouping | Factor | Excluded eligible sample n = 166a
| Included eligible sample n = 1060a
| Total sample n = 1060 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female | Male | ||||
| Age | Years [mean (SD)] | 14.8 (2.91) | 13.8 (2.8) | 14.3 (3.0) | 13.3 (2.5) |
| 10–14 | 659 (62.2) | 324 (55.5) | 335 (70.4) | ||
| 15–19 | 401 (37.8) | 260 (44.5) | 141 (29.6) | ||
| Gender | Female | 66 (56.9) | 584 (55.1) | 584 (100) | n/a |
| Language | Xhosa | 1028 (97.0) | 572 (97.9) | 456 (95.8) | |
| Housing | Formal | 861 (81.3) | 469 (80.3) | 392 (82.5) | |
| Informal | 198 (18.7) | 115 (19.7) | 83 (17.5) | ||
| Residence | Urban | 140 (77.6) | 828 (78.4) | 451 (77.5) | 377 (79.5) |
| Rural | 26 (22.4) | 228 (21.6) | 131 (22.5) | 97 (20.5) | |
| Family and caregiver characteristics | Maternal orphan | 464 (43.8) | 250 (42.8) | 214 (45.0) | |
| Paternal orphan | 320 (30.2) | 183 (31.3) | 137 (28.8) | ||
| Living with biological caregiver | 476 (44.9) | 275 (47.1) | 201 (42.2) | ||
| HIV-related factors | Vertical infection | 708 (66.8) | 348 (59.6) | 360 (75.6) | |
| Horizontal infection | 352 (33.2) | 236 (40.4) | 116 (24.4) | ||
| Knows HIV-positive status | 794 (74.9) | 442 (75.7) | 352 (73.9) | ||
aStatistical tests comparing the excluded and included eligible participants were non significant
bN (%) reported unless noted otherwise
Outcome measures and access to social protection provisions by gender
| Factor grouping | Factor | Female | Male | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Outcome | Unprotected sex at last intercourse | 164 (28.1) | 21 (4.4) | 185 (17.5) |
| STI symptomatic | 187 (32.0) | 127 (26.7) | 314 (29.6) | |
| Pregnant (current or ever) | 78 (13.4) | n/a | n/a | |
| Virological failurea | 33 (24.8) | 35 (26.3) | 68 (25.6) | |
| Economic ‘cash/cash-in-kind’ social protection provisions | Social cash transfers | 553 (94.7) | 450 (94.7) | 1003 (94.7) |
| Food security | 431 (73.8) | 389 (81.7) | 820 (77.4) | |
| Access to school | 355 (60.8) | 344 (72.3) | 699 (65.9) | |
| School feeding | 538 (92.1) | 448 (94.1) | 986 (93.0) | |
| Clothing | 393 (67.3) | 318 (66.8) | 711 (67.1) | |
| Psychosocial ‘care’ social protection provisions | Positive parenting | 298 (51.0) | 233 (49.1) | 531 (50.1) |
| Good parental supervision | 227 (38.9) | 206 (43.4) | 433 (40.9) | |
| HIV support group | 76 (13.0) | 65 (13.7) | 141 (13.3) | |
| Adolescent-sensitive clinic care | 487 (83.4) | 437 (91.8) | 924 (87.2) |
Virological failure defined as >1000 copies/ml
aSample size for viral load data n = 266, n = 133 girls (50 %) and n = 133 boys (50 %)
Associations of unprotected sex with pregnancy and STI symptomology among HIV-positive adolescent
| Factors | Model 1: HIV-positive adolescents girls (n = 584) | Model 2: HIV-positive adolescents (n = 1060) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OR (95 % CI) | p | OR (95 % CI) | p | |
| Outcome: unprotected sex at last intercourse | ||||
| Age | 1.607 (1.419–1.819) | ≤.001 | 1.723 (1.554–1.910) | ≤.001 |
| Gender | Not entered in model | 6.591 (3.884–11.155) | ≤.001 | |
| Informal housing | .832 (.455–1.522) | .551 | .869 (.510–1.481) | .607 |
| Rural residence | 1.499 (.858–2.622) | .155 | 1.384 (.848–2.260) | .194 |
| Maternal orphan | .524 (.266–1.030) | .061 | .619 (.349–1.095) | .100 |
| Paternal orphan | .773 (.461–1.296) | .329 | .722 (.464–1.122) | .147 |
| Lives with biological caregiver | .726 (.370–1.426) | .353 | .803 (.454–1.422) | .452 |
| Knows own HIV-positive status | 1.396 (.640–3.049) | .402 | 1.236 (.772–1.979) | .377 |
| Mode of infection—horizontal | 1.076 (.618–1.872) | .796 | .958 (.501–1.830) | .896 |
| Pregnancy | 5.717 (2.507–13.033) | ≤.001 | Not entered in model | |
| STI symptomology | Not entered in model | 1.542 (1.000–2.380) | .050 | |
Gender moderation effects for HIV-positive adolescents (n = 1060)
| Social protection provisions | Outcome: unprotected sexa | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | Gender | Social protection | Gender × social protectiona | |||||
| OR (95 % CI) | p | OR (95 % CI) | p | OR (95 % CI) | p | OR (95 % CI) | p | |
| Past-week food security | 1.734 (1.591–1.890) | ≤.001 | 8.045 (2.788–23.213) | ≤.001 | .907 (.093–8.842) | .933 | .832 (.247–2.801) | .766 |
| Access to school | 1.713 (1.571–1.867) | ≤.001 | 8.031 (3.581–18.010) | ≤.001 | .852 (.121–6.013) | .872 | .771 (.269–2.209) | .628 |
| Clothing | 1.747 (1.602–1.905) | ≤.001 | 10.012 (4.246–23.608) | ≤.001 | 1.886 (.258–13.793) | .532 | .608 (.208–1.781) | .365 |
| Positive parenting | 1.753 (1.607–1.912) | ≤.001 | 6.492 (3.322–12.688) | ≤.001 | .701 (.099–4.994) | .723 | 1.260 (.438–3.622) | .668 |
| Parental supervision | 1.718 (1.574–1.874) | ≤.001 | 7.390 (4.009–13.622) | ≤.001 | .783 (.096–6.395) | .820 | .809 (.259–2.531) | .716 |
| HIV support group | 1.749 (1.605–1.907) | ≤.001 | 7.777 (4.326–13.981) | ≤.001 | 2.034 (.210–19.673) | .540 | .765 (.220–2.667) | .675 |
| Adolescent-sensitive clinic care | 1.703 (1.562–1.858) | ≤.001 | 62.987 (7.708–514.724) | ≤.001 | 46.297 (.679–3157.684) | .075 | .078 (.009–.685) | .021 |
a Results for logistic regression models including age, gender, social protection provision and the interaction term for gender and each social protection term
Logistic regression models of all significant potential social protection factors, interaction terms, and covariates
| Outcome: unprotected sex | All HIV-positive adolescents (n = 1060) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Step 1 | OR (95 % CI) | p | ∆R2 | p |
| Age | 1.650 (1.512–1.801) | ≤.001 | .517*** | ≤.001 |
| Gender | 6.226 (3.683–10.523) | ≤.001 | ||
| Maternal orphan | Not included | |||
| Cash-in-kind—school access | .530 (.349–.804) | .003 | ||
| Care—good parental supervision | .616 (.383–.992) | .046 | ||
| Care—adolescent-sensitive clinic care | .424 (.254–.707) | .001 | ||
Logistic regression models of all significant potential social protection factors, interaction terms, and covariates
| Outcome: unprotected sex | HIV-positive adolescents girls (n = 584) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Step 1 | OR (95 % CI) | p | ∆R2 | p |
| Age | 1.699 (1.536–1.880) | ≤.001 | .528*** | ≤.001 |
| Gender | Not included | |||
| Maternal orphan | .587 (.361–.955) | .032 | ||
| Cash-in-kind—school access | .515 (.318–.833) | .007 | ||
| Care—good parental supervision | .634 (.364–1.103) | .107 | ||
| Care—adolescent-sensitive clinic care | .313 (.174–.564) | ≤.001 | ||