| Literature DB >> 28194587 |
Hazar Khidir1, Christina Psaros1,2, Letitia Greener3, Kasey O'Neil4, Mxolisi Mathenjwa3, F N Mosery3, Lizzie Moore5, Abigail Harrison6, David R Bangsberg1,4,7, Jennifer A Smit3,8, Steven A Safren9, Lynn T Matthews10,11,12.
Abstract
Within sexual partnerships, men make many decisions about sexual behavior, reproductive goals, and HIV prevention. There are increasing calls to involve men in reproductive health and HIV prevention. This paper describes the process of creating and evaluating the acceptability of a safer conception intervention for men living with HIV who want to have children with partners at risk for acquiring HIV in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Based on formative work conducted with men and women living with HIV, their partners, and providers, we developed an intervention based on principles of cognitive-behavioral therapy to support men in the adoption of HIV risk-reduction behaviors such as HIV-serostatus disclosure and uptake of and adherence to antiretroviral therapy. Structured group discussions were used to explore intervention acceptability and feasibility. Our work demonstrates that men are eager for reproductive health services, but face unique barriers to accessing them.Entities:
Keywords: Behavior change; HIV prevention; HIV-serodiscordant couples; Intervention development; MLWH; Qualitative research; Reproductive health; Safer conception; South Africa
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 28194587 PMCID: PMC5554741 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-017-1719-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165
Important findings from formative studies with key stakeholders
| Studies with stakeholders | Methods | Key findings |
|---|---|---|
| Qualitative studies with men and women living with HIV [ | In-depth interviews explored periconception HIV risk knowledge and practices and experiences accessing reproductive counseling | • Men and women living with HIV want to have children and this is often prioritized over HIV prevention |
| Quantitative study with men and women living with HIV [ | Cross-sectional survey on prevalence of periconception risk behavior | • Initially attempted to recruit recent pregnancy partners from HIV-infected women at an antenatal clinic; however, no women were able to bring their male partners |
| Studies with health care workers [ | In-depth interviews and focus group discussions explore provider practices of assessing fertility intentions and providing safer conception advice | • Most providers did not routinely assess reproductive goals among women or men living with HIV |
| Periconception HIV-risk behavior conceptual framework [ | Adapted the Information-Motivation-Behavioral Skill Model using formative research and the literature to identify individual, structural, and couple-level determinants of safer conception behavior | • High unemployment, cultural gender ideologies around manhood, and HIV-related stigma mean that men wield greater decision-making power within relationships |
Fig. 1Locally relevant images used to present key safer conception strategies including a Timed condomless sex to peak fertility, b Treatment as Prevention, c Pre-exposure Prophylaxis for the HIV-uninfected apartner
Fig. 2Safer conception intervention structure and content
Fig. 3Iterative intervention development study design schema
Fig. 4Structured group discussions recruitment flowchart