| Literature DB >> 29848345 |
John Kinuthia1, Benson Singa2, Christine J McGrath3, Beryne Odeny3, Agnes Langat4, Abraham Katana4, Lucy Ng'ang'a4, Jillian Pintye3, Grace John-Stewart3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission (PMTCT) programs usually test pregnant women for HIV without involving their partners. Non-disclosure of maternal HIV status to male partners may deter utilization of PMTCT interventions since partners play a pivotal role in decision-making within the home including access to and utilization of health services.Entities:
Keywords: Antiretrovirals; HIV; Male partner; Non-disclosure; PMTCT
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29848345 PMCID: PMC5975408 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-018-5567-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Characteristics of mothers with current male partners and known HIV status (n = 2522)a
| Characteristic | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| HIV-infected ( | HIV-uninfected ( | ||
|
| |||
| Age (years) | 28.4 (5.5) | 25.8 (5.5) | |
| Unmarried/not cohabiting | 11 (3%) | 64 (3%) | |
| Duration of relationship (years) | 6.8 (5.2) | 5.3 (4.7) | |
| Education | None | 32 (7.6%) | 141 (6.7%) |
| Primary | 243 (58%) | 988 (47%) | |
| Secondary | 111 (26%) | 669 (32%) | |
| > Secondary | 34 (8%) | 304 (14%) | |
| Employment | Salaried | 38 (9%) | 221 (11%) |
| Self employed | 138 (33%) | 564 (27%) | |
| Housewife | 173 (41%) | 956 (46%) | |
| Unemployed | 68 (16%) | 335 (16%) | |
| Income/month | KSH ≤ 5000 | 118 (48%) | 837 (62%) |
| KSH > 5000 | 128 (52%) | 507 (38%) | |
| IPV (from current male partner)b | 60 (14%) | 111 (5%) | |
| Current male partner characteristics | |||
| Partner age | 35.0 (7.7) | 31.2 (6.8) | |
| Partner education | None | 19 (5%) | 63 (3%) |
| Primary | 150 (39%) | 697 (34%) | |
| Secondary | 175 (45%) | 859 (42%) | |
| > Secondary | 44 (11%) | 405 (20%) | |
| Partner employment | Unemployed | 54 (13%) | 240 (12%) |
| Self employed | 199 (48%) | 943 (45%) | |
| Salaried | 162 (39%) | 900 (43%) | |
| Partner tested for HIV | 322 (77%) | 1471 (70%) | |
| Partner HIV statusc | HIV infected | 228 (71%) | 7 (1%) |
| HIV uninfected | 88 (27%) | 1433 (97%) | |
| Unknown | 6 (2%) | 31 (2%) | |
| Obstetric history | |||
| Number of living children | 2.9 (1.4) | 2.3 (1.5) | |
| Attended any ANCd | 414 (99%) | 2080 (99%) | |
| ≥4 ANC visitsd | 240 (59%) | 988 (49%) | |
| Partner did not attend ANCd | 270 (66%) | 1288 (62%) | |
| Health facility deliveryd | 352 (84%) | 1640 (78%) | |
| HIV status disclosure | |||
| Did not disclose HIV status to current male partner | 53 (13%) | 72 (3%) | |
SD standard deviation, IPV intimate partner violence, ANC antenatal care
aMissing data not shown, all models adjusted for clinic-level clustering
bIPV defined as having a score ≥ 10.5 on HITS scale
cAmong male partners who were tested for HIV
dDuring the most recent pregnancy
Correlates of HIV status non-disclosure among HIV-uninfected mothers with current male partners (n = 2102)a
| Univariate | Multivariateb | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Characteristic | OR (95% CI) | aOR (95% CI)2 | |||
| Maternal characteristics | |||||
| Age (years) | 0.98 (0.93–1.03) | 0.502 | |||
| Unmarried/not cohabiting | 5.90 (2.69–12.94) | < 0.001* | 3.79 (1.56–9.19) | 0.004 | |
| Duration of relationship (years) | 0.99 (0.94–1.04) | 0.613 | |||
| Education | None | ref | |||
| Primary | 1.67 (0.56–4.95) | 0.350 | |||
| Secondary | 0.79 (0.25–2.46) | 0.677 | |||
| > Secondary | 0.81 (0.23–2.86) | 0.738 | |||
| Employment | Salaried | ref | |||
| Self employed | 3.09 (0.93–10.31) | 0.066 | |||
| Housewife | 2.35 (0.74–7.50) | 0.146 | |||
| Unemployed | 3.64 (0.96–13.81) | 0.057 | |||
| KSH ≤ 5000 income/month | 2.25 (1.23–4.12) | 0.009* | 1.85 (1.00–3.41) | 0.050 | |
| IPV (from current male partner)c | 3.48 (1.83–6.62) | < 0.001* | 3.65 (1.84–7.21) | < 0.001 | |
| Current male partner characteristics | |||||
| Partner age (years) | 0.99 (0.94–1.04) | 0.634 | |||
| Partner education | None | Ref | |||
| Primary | 2.89 (0.38–21.99) | 0.304 | |||
| Secondary | 1.71 (0.21–13.72) | 0.613 | |||
| > Secondary | 1.25 (0.14–10.77) | 0.838 | |||
| Partner employment | Unemployed | Ref | |||
| Self employed | 1.55 (0.65–3.71) | 0.321 | |||
| Salaried | 0.80 (0.30–2.10) | 0.641 | |||
| Partner tested for HIV | 1.25 (0.67–2.31) | 0.476 | |||
| Partner HIV statusd | HIV-uninfected | Ref | |||
| HIV-infected | – | ||||
| Unknown | 4.23 (0.92–19.50) | 0.064 | |||
| Obstetric history | |||||
| Number of living children | 1.08 (0.94–1.23) | 0.266 | |||
| ≥4 ANC visits e | 0.63 (0.40–0.99) | 0.047 | |||
| Partner did not attend ANCe | 4.17 (1.92–9.05) | < 0.001 | 4.12 (1.89–8.95) | < 0.001 | |
| Health facility deliverye | 0.43 (0.26–0.71) | 0.001* | 0.47 (0.26–0.82) | 0.009 | |
SD standard deviation, IPV intimate partner violence, ANC antenatal care, OR odds ratio, aOR adjusted odds ratio
aMissing data not shown; all models adjusted for clinic-level clustering
bMultivariate models adjusted for marital status, duration of relationship and partner ANC attendance
cIPV defined as having a score ≥ 10.5 on HITS scale
dAmong male partners who were tested for HIV
eDuring the most recent pregnancy
Correlates of HIV status non-disclosure among HIV-infected mothers with current male partners (n = 420)a
| Univariate | Multivariateb | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Characteristic | OR (95% CI) | aOR (95% CI)b | |||
| Maternal characteristics | |||||
| Age (years) | 0.95 (0.89–1.02) | 0.137 | |||
| Unmarried/not cohabiting | 1.56 (0.33–7.41) | 0.572 | |||
| Duration of relationship (years) | 0.91 (0.84–0.98) | 0.017* | 0.90 (0.82–0.98) | 0.015* | |
| Education | None | ref | |||
| Primary | 1.31 (0.40–4.30) | 0.653 | |||
| Secondary | 1.63 (0.46–5.78) | 0.447 | |||
| > Secondary | 1.67 (1.41–6.74) | 0.470 | |||
| Employment | Salaried | ref | ref | ||
| Self employed | 4.18 (0.49–35.51) | 0.188 | 4.11 (0.47–35.77) | 0.198 | |
| Housewife | 5.67 (0.71–45.23) | 0.100 | 5.07 (0.65–39.52) | 0.120 | |
| Unemployed | 10.47 (1.20–91.31) | 0.034* | 9.19 (1.06–79.41) | 0.044 | |
| KSH ≤ 5000 income/month | 0.61 (0.26–1.47) | 0.269 | |||
| IPV (from current male partner)c | 1.08 (0.49–2.38) | 0.853 | |||
| Current male partner characteristics | |||||
| Partner age (years) | 0.97 (0.92–1.02) | 0.209 | |||
| Partner education | None | ref | |||
| Primary | 0.29 (0.08–1.03) | 0.056 | |||
| Secondary | 0.40 (0.11–1.45) | 0.163 | |||
| > Secondary | 0.44 (0.10–2.03) | 0.290 | |||
| Partner employment | Unemployed | ref | ref | ||
| Self employed | 0.59 (0.28–1.25) | 0.165 | 0.61 (0.30–1.24) | 0.169 | |
| Salaried | 0.43 (0.20–0.93) | 0.033* | 0.42 (0.18–0.96) | 0.039 | |
| Partner tested for HIV | 0.69 (0.26–1.81) | 0.445 | |||
| Partner HIV statusd | HIV-uninfected | ref | |||
| HIV-infected | 0.46 (0.17–1.24) | 0.124 | |||
| Unknown | – | ||||
| Obstetric history | |||||
| Number of living children | 0.89 (0.69–1.16) | 0.405 | |||
| ≥4 ANC visitse | 0.65 (0.37–1.15) | 0.139 | |||
| Partner did not attend ANCe | 2.65 (1.29–5.43) | 0.009* | 2.62 (1.28–5.35) | 0.009* | |
| Health facility deliverye | 1.10 (0.48–2.54) | 0.823 | |||
| HIV-related characteristics | |||||
| CD4 testing uptake | 0.29 (0.14–0.59) | 0.001* | 0.32 (0.15–0.69) | 0.004 | |
| CD4 results received | 0.49 (0.22–1.10) | 0.084 | |||
| Currently on HAART for own health | 0.39 (0.21–0.74) | 0.005* | 0.51 (0.25–1.04) | 0.063 | |
| Maternal ARV use | |||||
| During pregnancy | 0.42 (0.16–1.10) | 0.078 | |||
| During labour | 0.25 (0.11–0.53) | < 0.001* | 0.38 (0.15–0.97) | 0.042 | |
| During breastfeeding | 0.30 (0.15–0.62) | < 0.001* | 0.50 (0.22–1.14) | 0.096 | |
| Infant received PCR testing | 0.56 (0.31–1.01) | 0.053* | 0.60 (0.32–1.09) | 0.093 | |
| Infant ARV use | 0.08 (0.03–0.22) | < 0.001* | 0.08 (0.02–0.31) | < 0.001 | |
SD standard deviation, IPV intimate partner violence, ANC antenatal care, OR odds ratio, aOR adjusted odds ratio
aMissing data not shown; all models adjusted for clinic-level clustering
bMultivariate models adjusted for marital status, relationship length, and partner ANC attendance
cIPV defined as having a score ≥ 10.5 on HITS scale
dAmong male partners who were tested for HIV
eDuring the most recent pregnancy
*highlights factors were significantly different in univariate analysis