| Literature DB >> 29617775 |
Eshan U Patel1, Michelle R Kaufman2, Kim H Dam3, Lynn M Van Lith3, Karin Hatzold4, Arik V Marcell5, Webster Mavhu6, Catherine Kahabuka7, Lusanda Mahlasela8, Emmanuel Njeuhmeli9, Kim Seifert Ahanda9, Getrude Ncube10, Gissenge Lija11, Collen Bonnecwe12, Aaron A R Tobian1.
Abstract
Background: The World Health Organization (WHO) and the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) have set a Fast-Track goal to achieve 90% coverage of voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) among boys and men aged 10-29 years in priority settings by 2021. We aimed to identify age-specific facilitators of VMMC uptake among adolescents.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29617775 PMCID: PMC5888947 DOI: 10.1093/cid/cix951
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Infect Dis ISSN: 1058-4838 Impact factor: 9.079
Figure 1.Map of study sites.
Characteristics of the Study Population by Age Groupa
| Characteristic | Adolescents by Country and Age Group, No. (%) | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| South Africa | Tanzania | Zimbabwe | All Countries | |||||
| 10–14 y | 15–19 y | 10–14 y | 15–19 y | 10–14 y | 15–19 y | 10–14 y | 15–19 y | |
| Setting | ||||||||
| Urban | 115 (41.7) | 43 (25.3) | 189 (42.9) | 66 (66.7) | 184 (73.6) | 209 (72.1) | 488 (50.5) | 318 (56.9) |
| Periurban | 50 (18.1) | 48 (28.2) | 128 (29.0) | 25 (25.3) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 178 (18.4) | 73 (13.1) |
| Rural | 111 (40.2) | 79 (46.5) | 124 (28.1) | 8 (8.1) | 66 (26.4) | 81 (27.9) | 301 (31.1) | 168 (30.1) |
| Primary education | ||||||||
| None | 2 (0.7) | 7 (4.1) | 6 (1.4) | 4 (4.0) | 1 (0.4) | 1 (0.3) | 9 (0.9) | 12 (2.2) |
| Incomplete | 164 (59.4) | 15 (8.8) | 414 (93.9) | 21 (21.2) | 232 (92.8) | 182 (62.8) | 810 (83.8) | 218 (39.0) |
| Complete | 110 (39.9) | 146 (85.9) | 21 (4.8) | 74 (74.8) | 17 (6.8) | 107 (36.9) | 148 (15.3) | 327 (58.5) |
| Household wealthb | ||||||||
| Low | 7 (2.5) | 16 (9.4) | 322 (73.0) | 70 (70.7) | 39 (15.6) | 62 (21.4) | 368 (38.1) | 148 (26.5) |
| Moderate | 112 (40.6) | 56 (32.9) | 113 (25.6) | 24 (24.2) | 106 (42.4) | 105 (36.2) | 331 (34.2) | 185 (33.1) |
| High | 157 (56.9) | 98 (57.6) | 6 (1.4) | 5 (5.1) | 105 (42.0) | 123 (42.4) | 268 (27.7) | 226 (40.4) |
| Religion | ||||||||
| Christian | 252 (91.3) | 155 (91.2) | 425 (96.4) | 93 (93.9) | 239 (95.6) | 287 (99.0) | 916 (94.7) | 535 (95.7) |
| Muslim | 0 (0.0) | 2 (1.2) | 14 (3.2) | 0 (0.0) | 5 (2.0) | 0 (0.0) | 19 (2.0) | 2 (0.4) |
| Traditional | 6 (2.2) | 9 (5.3) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 6 (0.6) | 9 (1.6) |
| Agnostic/other | 12 (4.3) | 4 (2.4) | 1 (0.2) | 6 (6.1) | 6 (2.4) | 3 (1.0) | 19 (2.0) | 13 (2.3) |
| Ever had sexc | ||||||||
| No | 258 (93.5) | 92 (54.1) | 400 (90.7) | 44 (44.4) | 248 (99.2) | 217 (74.8) | 906 (93.7) | 353 (63.2) |
| Yes | 14 (5.1) | 78 (45.9) | 41 (9.3) | 55 (55.7) | 2 (0.8) | 73 (25.2) | 57 (5.9) | 206 (36.9) |
| Brothers’ MC status | ||||||||
| Circumcisedd | 159 (57.6) | 96 (56.5) | 252 (57.1) | 65 (65.7) | 75 (30.0) | 77 (26.6) | 486 (50.3) | 238 (42.6) |
| Uncircumcised | 71 (25.7) | 38 (22.4) | 38 (8.6) | 9 (9.1) | 99 (39.6) | 120 (41.4) | 208 (21.5) | 167 (29.9) |
| Don’t know | 7 (2.5) | 1 (0.6) | 13 (3.0) | 3 (3.0) | 2 (0.8) | 11 (3.8) | 22 (2.3) | 15 (2.7) |
| No brother | 39 (14.1) | 35 (20.6) | 138 (31.3) | 22 (22.2) | 74 (29.6) | 82 (28.3) | 251 (26.0) | 139 (24.9) |
| Father’s MC status | ||||||||
| Circumcised | 111 (40.2) | 34 (20.0) | 197 (44.7) | 33 (33.3) | 59 (23.6) | 39 (13.5) | 367 (38.0) | 106 (19.0) |
| Uncircumcised | 43 (15.6) | 41 (24.1) | 27 (6.1) | 13 (13.1) | 94 (37.6) | 107 (36.9) | 164 (17.0) | 161 (28.8) |
| Don’t know | 95 (34.4) | 63 (37.1) | 199 (45.1) | 44 (44.4) | 68 (27.2) | 67 (23.1) | 362 (37.4) | 174 (31.1) |
| Deceased father | 26 (9.4) | 30 (17.7) | 18 (4.1) | 9 (9.1) | 29 (11.6) | 77 (26.6) | 73 (7.6) | 116 (20.8) |
| VMMC information sourcee | ||||||||
| Parent | 19 (6.9) | 10 (5.9) | 52 (11.8) | 2 (2.0) | 8 (3.2) | 6 (2.1) | 79 (8.2) | 18 (3.2) |
| Other family | 18 (6.5) | 12 (7.1) | 47 (10.7) | 7 (7.1) | 12 (4.8) | 4 (1.4) | 77 (8.0) | 23 (4.1) |
| Peers | 38 (13.8) | 21 (12.4) | 96 (21.8) | 22 (22.2) | 16 (6.4) | 28 (9.7) | 150 (15.1) | 71 (12.7) |
| School | 99 (35.9) | 62 (36.5) | 99 (22.5) | 6 (6.1) | 139 (55.6) | 135 (46.6) | 337 (34.9) | 203 (36.3) |
| Health workerf | 89 (32.3) | 51 (30.0) | 128 (29.0) | 45 (45.5) | 61 (24.4) | 94 (32.4) | 278 (28.8) | 190 (34.0) |
| Media | 10 (3.6) | 10 (5.9) | 8 (1.8) | 14 (14.1) | 7 (2.8) | 15 (5.2) | 25 (2.6) | 39 (7.0) |
| Other | 3 (1.1) | 4 (2.4) | 5 (1.1) | 0 (0.0) | 5 (2.0) | 3 (1.0) | 13 (1.3) | 7 (1.3) |
Abbreviations: MC, male circumcision; VMMC, voluntary medical male circumcision.
aProportions may not add up to 100% owing to missing data.
bDistribution of wealth score based on household assets and amenities.
cAny kind of sexual experience (mutual genital touching or oral, vaginal, or anal sex).
dThe adolescent is aware that at least 1 brother has been circumcised.
eThe initial source from which participants remember first learning about VMMC.
fIncluding health facility workers, community health workers, and VMMC mobilizers.
Age Differences in Perceived Motivations to Undergo Voluntary Medical Male Circumcisiona
| Reason for Undergoing VMMC | Adolescents, No. (%) | PR (95% CI) | aPR (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aged 10–14 y (n = 967) | Aged 15–19 y (n = 559) | |||
| Someone advised it (eg, parent) | 279 (28.9) | 55 (9.8) | 1.86 (1.49–2.33)b | 1.88 (1.54–2.29)b |
| Suggested by school | 59 (6.1) | 9 (1.6) | 1.81 (1.23–2.65)b | 1.98 (0.98–3.99) |
| Want to be healthy | 82 (8.5) | 69 (12.3) | 0.60 (.45–.81)b | 0.59 (.43–.80)b |
| To protect myself from HIV/STIs | 569 (58.8) | 469 (83.9) | 0.77 (.67–.90)b | 0.77 (.66–.91)b |
| To protect myself/partner from cancer | 12 (1.2) | 30 (5.4) | 0.46 (.27–.79)b | 0.38 (.20–.73)b |
| To improve hygiene/easier to clean | 152 (15.7) | 158 (28.3) | 0.56 (.41–.77)b | 0.55 (.39–.77)b |
| Make my penis more attractive | 25 (2.6) | 17 (3.0) | 0.77 (.37–1.57) | 0.66 (.28–1.59) |
| Heard sex will be better | 4 (0.4) | 20 (3.6) | 0.12 (.05–.25)b | 0.10 (.05–.22)b |
| Friends were doing/did it | 95 (9.8) | 43 (7.7) | 0.94 (.73–1.23) | 0.87 (.68–1.11) |
| To become a man/adult | 2 (0.2) | 7 (1.3) | 0.19 (.06–.54)b | 0.17 (.03–.90)b |
| To avoid stigma, shame, or ridicule | 18 (1.9) | 10 (1.8) | 0.65 (.26–1.62) | 0.52 (.17–1.63) |
Abbreviations: aPR, adjusted prevalence ratio; CI, confidence interval; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; PR, prevalence ratio; STIs, sexually transmitted infections; VMMC, voluntary medical male circumcision.
aParticipants could provide multiple (unprompted) responses. PRs were estimated by modified Poisson regression with generalized estimating equations and robust standard errors to account for clustering of responses at the facility level; aPRs were estimated from multivariable models including adjustment for country and facility setting. The reference group was older adolescents (aged 15–19 years).
b P < .05.
Figure 2.Age and country differences in perceived norms of voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) and anticipated stigma for being uncircumcised. High descriptive norms refers to the perception that >50% of the adolescents’ friends were circumcised. High injunctive norms refers to the perception that VMMC is an approved behavior. High anticipated stigma refers to expectations of negative treatment if peers found out that the adolescent was not yet circumcised. Error bars represent design-based 95% confidence intervals as estimated by Taylor series linearization to account for clustering at the health facility level.
Figure 3.Age differences in the perceived level of human immunodeficiency virus protection provided by voluntary medical male circumcision.
Age Differences in Concerns About Undergoing Voluntary Medical Male Circumcisiona
| Perceived Concern | Adolescents, No. (%) | PR (95% CI) | aPR (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aged 10–14 y | Aged 15–19 y | |||
| Pain from procedure/injection | 430 (44.5) | 371 (66.4) | 0.95 (.87–1.03) | 0.95 (.87–1.04) |
| Duration of healing time | 22 (2.3) | 25 (4.5) | 0.64 (.27–1.50) | 0.71 (.28–1.78) |
| Sexual abstinence during wound healingb | 5 (0.5) | 13 (2.3) | 0.22 (.09–.62)c | … |
| Potential damage to penis | 11 (1.1) | 13 (2.3) | 0.49 (.22–1.08) | 0.67 (.30–1.51) |
Abbreviations: aPR, adjusted prevalence ratio; CI, confidence interval; PR, prevalence ratio.
aParticipants could provide multiple responses (unprompted). PRs were estimated by modified Poisson regression with generalized estimating equations and robust standard errors to account for clustering of responses at the facility level; aPRs were estimated from multivariable models that included adjustment for country and facility setting. The reference group was older adolescents (aged 15–19 years).
bResponse was observed only in South Africa. The multivariable model failed to converge, so there is no corresponding adjusted estimate.
c P < .05.
Factors Associated With the Highest Level of Desire to Undergo Voluntary Medical Male Circumcisiona
| Factor | Adolescents Aged 10–14 y | Adolescents Aged 15–19 y | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % (No./Total No.) | PR (95% CI) | aPR (95% CI) | % (No./Total No.) | PR (95% CI) | aPR (95% CI) | |
| Country | ||||||
| South Africa | 53.3 (147/276) | Reference | Reference | 60.6 (103/170) | Reference | Reference |
| Tanzania | 83.0 (366/441) | 1.22 (1.12–1.33)b | 1.15 (1.11–1.20)b | 97.0 (96/99) | 1.25 (1.13–1.38)b | 1.22 (1.12–1.32)b |
| Zimbabwe | 75.6 (189/250) | 1.15 (.98–1.36)c | 1.20 (1.04–1.38)b | 70.3 (204/290) | 1.04 (.87–1.24) | 1.09 (.95–1.24) |
| Setting | ||||||
| Urban | 75.2 (367/488) | Reference | Reference | 71.7 (228/318) | Reference | Reference |
| Periurban | 80.3 (143/178) | 1.05 (.90–1.22) | 1.01 (.96–1.07) | 86.3 (63/73) | 1.17 (1.00–1.35)b | 1.12 (1.01–1.23)b |
| Rural | 63.8 (192/301) | 0.94 (.78–1.13) | 0.96 (.88–1.05) | 66.7 (112/168) | 0.99 (.83–1.19) | 1.01 (.90–1.14) |
| Primary education | ||||||
| None or incomplete | 73.9 (605/819) | Reference | … | 76.1 (175/230) | Reference | … |
| Completed | 65.5 (97/148) | 1.02 (.97–1.07) | … | 69.4 (227/327) | 0.98 (.92–1.04) | … |
| Household wealth | ||||||
| Low | 71.0 (233/328) | Reference | … | 71.3 (134/188) | Reference | … |
| Moderate | 73.2 (259/354) | 1.00 (.98–1.02) | … | 71.3 (159/223) | 1.02 (.98-1.07) | … |
| High | 73.7 (210/285) | 0.98 (.94–1.01) | … | 74.3 (110/148) | 1.00 (.96–1.05) | … |
| Religion | ||||||
| Christian | 72.8 (667/916) | Reference | … | 72.2 (386/535) | Reference | … |
| Muslim | 79.0 (15/19) | 1.02 (.91–1.13) | … | 100.0 (2/2) | 1.34 (1.23–1.46)b | … |
| Traditional | 66.7 (4/6) | 1.05 (.76–1.46) | … | 55.6 (5/9) | 1.02 (.90–1.15) | … |
| Agnostic/other | 52.6 (10/19) | 0.98 (.84–1.15) | … | 76.9 (10/13) | 0.99 (.88–1.12) | … |
| Ever had sex (any) | ||||||
| No | 72.3 (655/906) | Reference | … | 72.0 (254/353) | Reference | … |
| Yes | 80.7 (46/57) | 1.02 (.95–1.09) | … | 72.3 (149/206) | 1.00 (.96–1.05) | … |
| Circumcised brother | ||||||
| No | 71.5 (344/481) | Reference | … | 72.0 (231/321) | Reference | … |
| Yes | 73.7 (358/486) | 1.01 (.97–1.06) | … | 72.3 (172/238) | 0.99 (.96–1.03) | … |
| Circumcised father | ||||||
| No | 70.8 (424/599) | Reference | … | 72.5 (327/451) | Reference | … |
| Yes | 75.5 (277/367) | 1.04 (1.00–1.07)b | … | 70.8 (75/105) | 0.99 (.94–1.03) | … |
| Descriptive norms | ||||||
| Low | 65.6 (318/485) | Reference | … | 71.1 (182/256) | Reference | … |
| High | 80.5 (375/466) | 1.06 (1.00–1.12)c | … | 73.6 (220/299) | 0.99 (.93–1.06) | … |
| Injunctive norms | ||||||
| Low | 64.4 (322/500) | Reference | Reference | 69.3 (196/283) | Reference | Reference |
| High | 83.1 (364/438) | 1.08 (1.03–1.13)b | 1.07 (1.03–1.12)b | 75.1 (205/273) | 1.01 (.97–1.05) | 1.01 (.96–1.05) |
| Anticipated stigma | ||||||
| Low | 63.7 (353/554) | Reference | Reference | 63.2 (206/326) | Reference | Reference |
| High | 86.6 (341/394) | 1.06 (1.03–1.10)b | 1.04 (1.02–1.07)b | 84.7 (194/229) | 1.02 (.997–1.04)c | 1.01 (.98–1.03)c |
| HIV protection among males | ||||||
| None | 64.1 (75/117) | Reference | … | 73.5 (50/68) | Reference | … |
| Yes, some | 74.6 (344/461) | 1.02 (.93–1.11) | … | 72.8 (295/405) | 0.97 (.90–1.05) | … |
| Yes, completely | 76.9 (113/147) | 1.08 (1.01–1.15)b | … | 65.3 (32/49) | 0.97 (.90–1.05) | … |
| Don’t know | 71.1 (170/239) | 1.02 (.95–1.10) | … | 72.2 (26/36) | 0.98 (.87–1.10) | … |
| HIV protection among females | ||||||
| None | 77.2 (61/79) | Reference | Reference | 70.8 (92/130) | Reference | Reference |
| Yes, some | 74.3 (185/249) | 1.03 (.99–1.06) | 1.04 (1.01–1.08)b | 70.6 (216/306) | 1.00 (.93–1.07) | 1.00 (.92–1.07) |
| Yes, completely | 69.6 (181/260) | 1.08 (1.01–1.16)b | 1.08 (1.01–1.16)b | 88.5 (23/26) | 1.06 (1.01–1.11)b | 1.05 (.998–1.10)c |
| Don’t know | 72.7 (272/374) | 1.03 (.99–1.07) | 1.05 (.996–1.11)c | 73.4 (69/94) | 1.01 (.95–1.07) | 1.00 (.94–1.07) |
| Concerned about pain | ||||||
| No | 80.6 (433/537) | Reference | Reference | 79.8 (150/188) | Reference | Reference |
| Yes | 62.6 (269/430) | 0.88 (.83–.95)b | 0.89 (.83–.96)b | 68.2 (253/371) | 0.99 (.94–1.04) | 1.00 (.95–1.05) |
| Expected recovery | ||||||
| Easy/very easy | 74.6 (620/831) | Reference | … | 73.6 (376/511) | Reference | … |
| Hard/very hard | 60.0 (75/125) | 0.94 (.88–.99)b | … | 57.5 (27/47) | 0.99 (.88–1.11) | … |
Abbreviations: aPR, adjusted prevalence ratio; CI, confidence interval; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; PR, prevalence ratio.
aThe outcome was the highest level of desire (10/10) to be circumcised the same day. PRs were estimated by modified Poisson regression with generalized estimating equations and robust standard errors to account for clustering of responses at the facility level. aPRs were estimated from age-stratified multivariable models that included covariates that significantly contributed to either age-stratified model, as indicated by global Wald tests and a significance threshold of .05. The reference group was older adolescents (aged 15–19 years). There was no significant multicollinearity observed in the models presented. Results from this exploratory analysis, particularly the effect sizes, should be interpreted with caution as there was limited variability in the outcome.
b P < .05.
c P < .10.