| Literature DB >> 28207802 |
T Charles Witzel1, Wezzie Lora2, Shelley Lees3, Nicola Desmond2,4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: HIV testing and counselling (HTC) interventions are key to controlling the HIV epidemic in East and Southern Africa where HTC is primarily delivered through voluntary counselling and testing (VCT), provider initiated testing and counselling (PITC), and home-based counselling and testing (HBVCT). Decision making processes around uptake of HTC models must be taken into account when designing new interventions. Counselling in HTC aims to reduce post-test risk taking behaviour and to link individuals to care but its efficacy is unclear. This meta-ethnography aims to understand the contexts of HTC uptake in East and Southern Africa and to analyse the perceived impacts of counselling-based interventions in relation to sexual behaviour and linkage to care.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28207802 PMCID: PMC5313213 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0170588
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
List of keywords.
Exclusion and inclusion criteria.
| Exclude | Include | |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-2003 | January 2003-April 2014 | |
| Non-peer reviewed content | Peer reviewed studies | |
| Quantitative surveys, studies with no qualitative element. | Qualitative research, ethnography, results from focus groups / interviews, mixed-methods studies. | |
| Under 18s. | Adults 18 years and older. | |
| Reviews, opinion pieces, letters to the editor style work | Peer-reviewed primary research, qualitative meta-synthesis | |
| Non-English language | English language | |
| Non-ESA countries | East and Southern Africa | |
| Non-HIV testing | Impacts of HIV testing |
Fig 1Literature search flow chart.
Study summaries.
| First author, year | Primary aim | ocation | Sampling Strategy | Sample | Data Collection | HTC Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Bunnel et al, 2005 [ | To identify challenges for discordance, challenges and prevention strategies. | Kampala, Uganda | Purposive sampling | 67 individuals (32 women, 35 men) | In-depth interviews, focus groups | VCT |
| 2. Bwambale, 2008 [ | Determining the prevalence and factors associated with VCT use among men. | Bukonzo West district, Uganda | Cluster sampling | Quantitative: 780 Men | Quantitative: Survey | VCT |
| Qualitative: 44 individuals | Qualitative: 4 Focus Group Discussions (FGDs) | |||||
| Healthcare workers | 10 Key Informant Interviews | |||||
| 3. Daftary, 2007. [ | Explore decision making process for HIV testing and serostatus disclosure by 21 patients hospitalised with M/XDR-TB. | Durban, South Africa | Not explicit | 21 patients | 21 In-depth interviews | VCT |
| 4. Emusu, 2009 [ | Gain a deeper understanding of the nature and contexts of the sexual violence experienced by women in HIV sero-discordant unions. | Kampala, Jinja, & Mbale Uganda | Not explicit | 26 women | 26 interviews using critical incident interviewing | VCT |
| 5. Groves, 2010. [ | Explore women’s experiences of consent during PITC. | Durban, South Africa | Purposive | 25 women | 25 semi-structured interviews | PITC |
| 6. Jürgensen, 2013. [ | To investigate possible explanations for high acceptance of HBVCT. | Monze, Southern Province Zambia | Quantitative: Cluster randomisation | Quantitative: 1694 in 36 clusters (18 clusters offered HB-VCT). | Quantitative–Baseline and follow up survey | HBVCT |
| Qualitative: Purposive | Qualitative: 27 Men and women | Qualitative: 22 in-depth Interviews, 1 FGD | ||||
| 7. Kyaddondo, 2010. [ | Examine the experiences of HBVCT clients in relation to 1) the process of mobilisation, 2) counselling, consent, privacy and confidentiality, 3) disclosure, 4) referral to care | Kumi, Eastern Uganda | Cluster sampling | 395 men and women | 395 semi-structured questionnaires | HBVCT |
| 8. Lifshay, 2009. [ | To inform development of effective interventions for HIV-positive individuals. | Uganda (Jinja and two unidentified rural areas) | Purposive | 48 HIV+ individuals | 37 Interviews (10 excluded, 1 died) | VCT |
| 9. Lubega, 2013. [ | Explore reasons for continued attendance and attrition during ANC care for HIV positive women. | Iganga, Uganda | Not explicit | 7 key Informants | 20 In-depth interviews | PITC |
| 20 HIV+ women | 7 Key informant interviews | |||||
| 112 carers and relatives | 10 FGD with carers and relatives | |||||
| 10. MacPherson, 2012. [ | Better understand the patient, provider and health service barriers and facilitators contributing to progression through the care pathway. | Blantyre, Malawi | Purposive sampling from a cohort study | 30 adults | 40 Semi-structured interviews | VCT |
| 5 counsellors, 3 nurses, 2 clinical officers | ||||||
| 11. Musheke, 2013 [ | Examine the experiences of couples participating in PITC. | Lusaka, Zambia | Maximum variation sampling | 10 couples (3 discordant) | 10 couple interviews | PITC |
| 7 individual interviews | ||||||
| 5 women and 2 men abandoned by spouses | 7 key informant interviews | |||||
| 5 lay counsellors and 2 nurses | Participant observation | |||||
| 12. Nyanzi-Wakholi, 2009 [ | Investigating the role of VCT and treatment in enabling HIV-positive Ugandans to cope with HIV. | Uganda | Purposive | 108 participants from ECohort and DART trials | 12 FGDs | VCT |
| 13. Rohleder, 2005 [ | Investigate the impact of the unclear positions of counsellors in a health service providing VCT. | Khayelitsha, South Africa | Convenience sampling | 29 counsellors | 16 Interviews | VCT |
| 3 FGD | ||||||
| 14. Rujumba, 2012 [ | Exploring pregnant HIV positive and HIV negative women’s partner disclosure experiences and support needs. | Eastern Uganda | Purposive sampling from ANC testing | 15 HIV+ and 15 HIV- women | 30 in-depth interviews | PITC |
| One doctor, two counsellors and three nurse midwives | 6 key Informant interviews | |||||
| 15. Sarna, 2009. [ | To understand changes in sexual behaviour after treatment initiation and factors influencing condom use. | Mombasa, Kenya | Stratified purposive sampling | 23 adults receiving ART | 23 in-depth interviews | VCT |
| 16. Sethosa, 2005 [ | To evaluate HTC, self-disclosure, social support and sexual behaviour change among HIV reactive patients among a rural sample of HIV reactive patients. | Rural South Africa | Convenience sampling | 55 HIV positive people. | 55 semi-structured interviews | PITC |
| 17. Shamu, 2010 [ | Explore women’s and health workers’ perspectives and experiences of sexuality and sexual violence in pregnancy, including in relation to HTC. | Harare Zimbabwe | Not explicit | 64 Pregnant / nursing mothers | 7 FGDs | PITC |
| 7 Health Workers | 7 Key informant interviews | |||||
| 18. Sikasote, 2011 [ | To understand the influence of VCT and an-HIV negative result on subsequent sexual behaviour and to identify the specific felt needs of those testing negative. | Copperbelt province, Zambia | Purposive Purposive | 55 clients | 42 initial interviews | VCT |
| 25 psychological counsellors | 32 follow-up interviews | |||||
| 3 FGDs | ||||||
| 19. Siu, 2014 [ | To explore the social context and relations that shape men’s access to HTC. | Busia district, Eastern Uganda | Purposive and snowball | 26 men | 26 in-depth interviews | VCT |
| 20. Taegtmeyer, 2013 [ | To understand Kenyan providers’ attitudes towards and experience with counselling MSM in a research clinic targeting this group for HIV prevention. | Coastal Kenya surrounding Mombasa | Convenience sampling | 13 counsellors and 3 clinicians delivering HTC | 16 Semi-structured in-depth interviews | VCT |
Context of HTC uptake.
| Third order labels | Third order constructs | Second order constructs | Source material |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.1 VCT as a response to threats to identities from enduring illness. | • Postponing engagement with VCT services until visibly unwell [ | [ | |
| • Fears that illnesses were visible to others [ | |||
| • Individuals sought VCT when health failed sufficiently to mitigate fear around an HIV positive result [ | |||
| 1.2 VCT as a means to restore order in response to past risk(s) | • Individuals seek VCT after a risk event [ | [ | |
| • Desire to regain control as key motivator for seeking VCT [ | |||
| • Death of spouse or others in sexual networks prompts individual seeking VCT [ | |||
| 1.3 Encouragement from individuals in social or supportive networks in context of VCT and PITC | • Men discuss HIV testing mainly with peers. Involved reviewing sexual histories and risk discussions [ | [ | |
| • Women who felt they had a choice in testing for HIV had thought about it previously. Many had discussed testing with family or partners [ | |||
| 1.4 HBVCT decisions located in household and community spheres with pressure applied through social roles. | • Community leaders supported HBVCT interventions by encouraging individuals to test [ | [ | |
| • Interactions and discussions among partners and other family members influenced individual decisions to test at home. [ | |||
| • Three potential sources of influence on testing decisions were the partner, the headman and the counsellor [ | |||
| 1.5 Power dynamics within PITC in ANC coerce women into testing by relying upon their familial roles and obligations. | • There was little opportunity for pregnant women to refuse HTC as the health workers are thought of as powerful, senior members of the community [ | [ | |
| • A dominant message that pregnant women received at the clinic is that being tested for HIV is the right thing to do for the health of the baby [ | |||
| • Couples were deprived of the right to consent through health care workers evoking maternal/paternal responsibility to encourage uptake of HIV testing [ |
Perceive impacts of HTC in relation to sexual behaviour and linkage to care.
| Third order labels | Third order constructs | Second order constructs | Source material |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2.1 Inability of counselling to address broader patient circumstances affecting risk behaviour. | • VCT counsellor training was inadequate for working with MSM. Most learnt on the job [ | [ | |
| • Respondents were only advised about condom use, not reducing partners. Women reported less support from counsellors, family and friends around reducing frequency of sex [ | |||
| 2.2 Sexual pleasure and linked condom preferences as barriers to risk reduction. | • Pain experienced by women when using condoms, continued sexual desire, partners’ desire for children, and assumptions about sero-concordance posed challenges for risk reduction [ | [ | |
| • Many women and female partners disliked using condoms because they caused pain during intercourse [ | |||
| 2.3 Feelings of inevitability surrounding HIV transmission constraining choice. | • In long relationships between discordant partners, a sense of immunity coupled with a degree of fatalism obstructed condom use [ | [ | |
| 2.4 Issues relating to gender roles within relationships modulated by socio economic factors. | • Suspicions of infidelity and blame around HIV infection shaped intimate partner violence. Being younger, physically weaker, and/or economically dependent on male partners hindered the women’s ability to resist sexual advances of partners perceived to be at high risk of transmitting or getting infected with HIV [ | [ | |
| • Women’s financial dependence on their male spouses limited their ability to seek care after diagnosis [ | |||
| 2.5 Cultural beliefs about HIV and HIV transmission. | • Assumptions that if one partner tested negative the other must also be negative were common [ | [ | |
| • Sero-discordance was not believed to be possible [ | |||
| 2.6 Tensions between notions of safety and expectations based on traditional gender roles. | • Condoms were associated with casual sex. They were not believed to have a place in marital or long term sexual relationships [ | [ | |
| • Childbearing desires of both male and female respondents limited their ability to use condoms consistently [ | |||
| 2.7 Low quality interventions lead to patient attrition from care pathways. | • Post-test counselling provided to expectant mothers was inadequate [ | [ | |
| • Care was infantilising and created dependency [ |