| Literature DB >> 27887669 |
Anna Joy Rogers1, Lillian Achiro2, Elizabeth A Bukusi2,3, Abigail M Hatcher4,5, Zachary Kwena2, Pamela L Musoke6, Janet M Turan6, Elly Weke2, Lynae A Darbes7.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: HIV infection is frequently transmitted within stable couple partnerships. In order to prevent HIV acquisition in HIV-negative couples, as well as improve coping in couples with an HIV-positive diagnosis, it has been suggested that interventions be aimed at strengthening couple relationships, in addition to addressing individual behaviours. However, little is known about factors that influence relationships to impact joint decision-making related to HIV.Entities:
Keywords: Africa; HIV; couples interventions; health behaviour; pregnancy; qualitative
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27887669 PMCID: PMC5124108 DOI: 10.7448/IAS.19.1.21224
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int AIDS Soc ISSN: 1758-2652 Impact factor: 5.396
Figure 1Pregnant women and male partners interviewed in each study phase.
Interview participant characteristics
| Pregnant women | Male partners | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Characteristics | Total | HIV-positive | HIV-negative | Female partner is HIV-positive | Female partner is HIV-negative |
| Participant age (years) | --------------------------------- | ||||
| 18–24 | 26 (32.5) | 8 (40) | 10 (50) | 3 (15) | 5 (25) |
| 25–34 | 32 (40.0) | 10 (50) | 10 (50) | 7 (35) | 5 (25) |
| 35–44 | 12 (15.0) | 2 (10) | 0 (0) | 7 (35) | 3 (15) |
| ≥45 | 10 (12.5) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 3 (15) | 7 (35) |
| Participant education | |||||
| Did not complete primary | 23 (28.8) | 5 (25) | 6 (30) | 9 (45) | 3 (15) |
| Completed primary | 29 (36.2) | 11 (55) | 5 (25) | 4 (20) | 9 (45) |
| Did not complete secondary | 9 (11.3) | 1 (5) | 3 (15) | 3 (25) | 2 (10) |
| Completed secondary | 13 (16.2) | 2 (10) | 3 (15) | 4 (20) | 4 (20) |
| Any college | 6 (7.5) | 1 (5) | 3 (15) | 0 (0) | 2 (10) |
| Marital status | |||||
| Monogamous marriage | 56 (70.0) | 11 (55) | 17 (85) | 13 (65) | 15 (75) |
| Polygamous marriage | 20 (25.0) | 5 (25) | 3 (15) | 7 (35) | 5 (25) |
| Single | 1 (1.2) | 1 (5) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| Widow | 3 (3.8) | 3 (15) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| Currently living with spouse | 65 (81) | 10 (50) | 18 (90) | 18 (90) | 19 (95) |
| Number of living children | |||||
| 0 | 18 (22.5) | 4 (20) | 8 (40) | 2 (10) | 4 (20) |
| 1 | 6 (7.5) | 2 (10) | 2 (10) | 1 (5) | 1 (5) |
| 2 | 19 (23.7) | 5 (25) | 6 (30) | 4 (20) | 4 (20) |
| 3 or more | 37 (46.3) | 9 (45) | 4 (20) | 13 (65) | 11 (55) |
| Occupation | |||||
| Agriculture | 27 (34.6) | 1 (5) | 7 (35) | 10 (50) | 9 (45) |
| Small business/sales | 12 (15.4) | 5 (25) | 4 (20) | 2 (10) | 1 (5) |
| Skilled or semi-skilled worker | 26 (33.3) | 3 (15) | 5 (25) | 8 (40) | 10 (50) |
| Housewife | 13 (16.7) | 9 (45) | 4 (20) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| Pregnancy duration (weeks)a | |||||
| 3–28 weeks | 40 (51.2) | 12 (60) | 7 (35) | 12 (60) | 9 (45) |
| 29–40 weeks | 38 (48.8) | 7 (35) | 13 (65) | 7 (35) | 11 (55) |
There are missing values for two participants in each of these categories, so the total percentages have a denominator of 78 participants rather than 80.
Figure 2The interdependence model of communal coping and health behaviour change, adapted from Lewis et al. (19). Used with permission.
Predisposing factors for couple interdependence
| Characteristic | Exemplar text | Participant identifier |
|---|---|---|
| Communication and trust | ||
| Mutual respect | “The respect that she has allows me to be free with her … If you take a keen look at your wife, you can find that she is a little sincere. This can encourage you to be free. You cannot understand each other or discuss anything if there is no respect between the two of you.” | Male partner #17, HIV-positive |
| Listening ability | “One can have an opinion but the other partner looks down upon it. Such things cannot encourage discussions in the family. In a family, one should be able to listen to what is being said so that they can all participate.” | Male partner #20, HIV-negative |
| Humour | “We discuss issues like recently we were discussing the number of children that we would want to have. Then he said five, but I said five is too many and asked him who would carry all those [pregnancies] … he just laughed and never said anything. We always joke with each other.” | Pregnant woman #19, HIV-negative |
| Spending time together | “[Getting more time as a couple] will bring peace to our family. You will never know what your partner thinks about the marriage unless you take your time to sit down with him or her for a conversation.” | Male partner #13, HIV-negative |
| Willingness to resolve conflicts | “Despite the fact that issues and quarrels must always be there in the house, we always sit and discuss … if it reaches a point that we can't communicate to each other because of small issues here and there then we will jeopardize our relationships [and] we may start being unfaithful to each other.” | Male partner #04, HIV-negative |
| Faithfulness in marriage | “The most important thing is faithfulness. I have never been unfaithful to my wife. But I do have a problem with the guys who want her… But I still trust her that there is no relationship between her and other men.” | Male partner #05, HIV-negative |
| Having a mediator/counsellor | “You know a woman and her husband cannot talk and agree on something that already got spoilt. But people's experiences from outside [the marital relationship] can make someone listen and this can bring peace in their house … someone from outside can teach you and you take these teachings and agree with each other.” | Pregnant woman #26, HIV-positive |
| Shared children | “[Marriage] is all about having children… You must be happy when the wife is pregnant. She is going to add another member of the family.” | Male partner #14, HIV-negative |
Predisposing factors that may hamper couple interdependence
| Characteristic | Exemplar text | Participant identifier |
|---|---|---|
| Lack of communication and trust | ||
| Dishonesty | “You should not live lying to each other. Sometimes someone lies to the other, they are sick and the other person is healthy. So this other person will bring death to the other here in their house because there is no openness and the healthy person will contract the disease. If you are open with each other you can find a way of preventing this.” | Pregnant woman #27, HIV-positive |
| Mistrust | “If there is mistrust in the house, there will be no communication in that house because you cannot share with me something and you do not trust me and myself I will do the same to you if you do not trust me.” | Male partner #23, HIV-positive |
| Polygamous marriages | “When the HIV virus strikes, for one to know that one of us is sick and the other is not becomes hard, since he marries every now and then, yet he doesn't want to reveal his status to me. When you ask him if he has gone for a test with these women he says … I should stay away. At the end of it, I am left staring since I can't do anything about it …” | Pregnant woman #06, HIV-negative |
| Wife inheritance | “There are so many women who have lost their husbands so you find them coming to your husband for companionship purposes. You find that this woman tries all ways and means until she gets your husband to inherit her, yet you do not know the nature of the disease or ailment that led to her husband's death.” | Pregnant woman #01, HIV-negative |
| Financial difficulties | “She realized that my income had depreciated. She decided to run away with the money she had collected from the business. She left me with a child and I found it difficult to stay alone with the child.” | Male partner #07, HIV-negative |
| Long-distance relationships | “Currently, life is difficult. I am very far from my wife. The child might become sick … She is like a single parent in the house … I therefore think we need to be together … She might wonder whether I have rejected her or not … So being close to her is good because you can help her in a way or another.” | Male partner #03, HIV-negative |
Transformation of motivation
| Characteristic | Exemplar text | Participant identifier |
|---|---|---|
| Indicators of relationship-centred motivations | ||
| Use of “we” rather than “I” language | “I want us to take care of ourselves. If at all we still don't have [HIV], we need to take measures to continue protecting ourselves.” | Male partner #14, HIV-negative |
| Disclosing for sake of partner's health | “… [If] I know my status and I am on drugs and she is not then I will be doing her more harm. If we make love without protection she will be more disadvantaged because I am on drugs and she is not.” | Male partner #31, HIV-positive |
| Time of transformation of motivation | ||
| Prior to marriage | “We however didn't go straight into marriage because we wanted to go for the [HIV] test first … in case the lady was sick, then she has infected me. I would have also infected her in case I was sick.” | Male partner #02, HIV-negative |
| During pregnancy | “The truth is that since the pregnancy, we have never quarrelled neither have I changed my mind or turned my back at her. At the same time I haven't see her hate me.” (Male partner #04, HIV-negative) | Pregnant woman #01, HIV-negative |
Communal coping to improve health-enhancing behaviours
| Characteristic | Exemplar text | Participant identifier |
|---|---|---|
| Communal coping within HIV-negative couples | ||
| Couples HIV testing and counselling (CHTC) | “[Couples] should get tested together to know their HIV status. Going for HIV test can make one to have the fear of engaging in extra marital affairs because once they are HIV-negative, they would want to protect themselves. There are very many beautiful ladies who are very tempting outside here but knowing my HIV status is what has been keeping me in check.” | Male partner #18, HIV-negative |
| Preparing mentally for the HIV test | “I first discussed with her in the house before we left for the clinic that we were going to be tested together for HIV to know our status early enough so that in case we are HIV-positive then we can seek help. I told her not to be fearful but to be confident as much as we didn't know what the results would be.” | Male partner #04, HIV-negative |
| Communal coping within couples that have an HIV-positive diagnosis | ||
| Resolve negative emotions | “I felt bad because… I felt that we were still too young and could not possibly be having HIV virus, but he tried talking to me until I accepted the facts, he also told me that he got courage after he was counselled from the hospital … I became courageous. When I enrolled for the ARVs [antiretroviral medications] I did not feel anything.” | Pregnant woman #36, HIV-positive |
| Cope with stigma | “I told her that in today's life, everyone is either infected or affected hence it is not strange that one is enrolled on care and advised her to go the to the hospital and take medicine.” | Male partner #21, HIV-positive |
| Medication adherence and clinic appointment reminders | “If they talk about [HIV] in the right and peaceful manner in their house, that is one thing that can unite them in their house, one of the good things about talking to your wife about your HIV status that men can see is that these women can remind them to swallow their medicine and also the date of attending adherence, it becomes their family responsibility.” | Male partner #31, HIV-positive |
| Avoid suicidal ideation | “If you don't understand each other then it becomes disadvantageous because everyone thinks of their own things. Someone might feel that since they have the disease then they should just die or do something that is not right and this will endanger their health.” | Pregnant woman #24, HIV-positive |
| Avoid violence and separation | “My sister found a man and got married [to him] without knowing that he was on medication [for HIV]. They stayed [in a relationship] for a while, gave birth to a child and decided to have some tests done. When she came back to tell the husband [of her HIV-positive status], he was very harsh and chased her away. She didn't take the husband seriously. He came back home very drunk, took a machete and chased her away.” | Pregnant woman #34, HIV-positive |