| Literature DB >> 29587710 |
Roxanne Beauclair1,2, Jonathan Dushoff3, Wim Delva4,5,6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Age disparities in sexual relationships have been proposed as a key risk factor for HIV transmission in Sub-Saharan Africa, but evidence remains inconclusive. The SIHR study, a cluster randomised trial of a cash transfer programme in Malawi, found that young women in the intervention groups were less likely to have had a sexual partner aged 25 or older, and less likely to test positive for HIV and HSV-2 at follow-up compared to control groups. We examined the hypotheses that girls in the intervention groups had smaller age differences than control groups and that large age differences were associated with relationship-level HIV transmission risk factors: inconsistent condom use, sex frequency, and relationship duration.Entities:
Keywords: Age-disparate relationships; Age-mixing; Malawi; Sexual risk behaviour; Southern Africa
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29587710 PMCID: PMC5872581 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-018-5327-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Overview of SIHR study intervention and data collection rounds. *HIV data collected during Round 2 biomarker collection were not made publicly available, and therefore, not used in our analysis
Fig. 2Summary statistics for relationship characteristics, by study group and round. The panels contain summaries for: a. condom use (n = 1491); b. sex frequency (n = 1490); c. age difference (n = 1364); and d. relationship duration (n = 1256)
Fig. 3Results of linear mixed-effects model with age difference as the outcome. Beta coefficient and 95% Confidence Interval (95% CI) plot for the (fixed) effects of age, study group, and round on age difference between a girl and her partner
Fig. 4Results of cumulative-link mixed model with condom use as the outcome. In this model age difference was a spline term. a. cumulative probability of condom use categories for age difference. b. predicted effect of age difference on ordinal condom use score (scored as 0 for “never” up to 2 for “every time”), with shaded areas representing the 95% CI. c. proportional odds ratio (POR) and 95% CI plot for non-spline terms in the model
Fig. 5Results of cumulative-link mixed model with sex frequency as the outcome. Both age and age difference were spline terms in this model. a. cumulative probability of sex frequency categories for age difference. b. cumulative probability of sex frequency categories for age of participant. c. predicted effect of age difference on ordinal sex frequency score (scored as 0 for “1-2 times” up to 4 for “4 per week”) for age difference, with the shaded areas representing 95% CIs. d. ordinal sex frequency score for age of participant with the shaded areas representing 95% CIs. e. proportional odds ratio (POR) and 95% CI plot for non-spline terms in the model
Fig. 6Results of Cox proportional hazards model for relationship duration. In this model age difference was represented with a spline. a. coefficient plot of hazard ratios for ending relationships (HR and 95% CI) for all non-spline terms in the model. b. predicted HRs for age differences, with the median (age difference = 3) as the reference. c. expected survival curves for selected age differences (2.5th, 25th, 50th, 75th and 97.5th percentiles)