| Literature DB >> 30611219 |
Soori Nnko1, Evodius Kuringe2, Daniel Nyato2, Mary Drake3, Caterina Casalini3, Amani Shao2, Albert Komba3, Stefan Baral4, Mwita Wambura2, John Changalucha2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: HIV testing and counselling (HTC) is an essential component for HIV prevention and a critical entry point into the HIV continuum of care and treatment. Despite the importance of HTC for HIV control, access to HTC services among female sex workers (FSWs) in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) remains suboptimal and little is known about factors influencing FSWs' access to HTC. Guided by the client-centred conceptual framework, we conducted a systematic review to understand the facilitators and barriers influencing FSWs in SSA to access HTC services.Entities:
Keywords: Access; Determinants; Female sex workers; HIV testing and counselling; Sub-Saharan Africa
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30611219 PMCID: PMC6321716 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-018-6362-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1A conceptual framework of access to health care developed by Levesque et al. Source: Levesque et al. International Journal for Equity in Health 2013, 12:1
Fig. 2PRISMA Flow diagram of article selection
Characteristics of selected articles
| Author/ citation | Country | Study aim | Study design/type of data |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aho et al., (2011) [ | Guinea | To describe the acceptability and outcomes of HTC among a stigmatised and vulnerable group. | Baseline: Interview / FGDs & survey ( |
| Ameyan et al., (2015) [ | Ethiopia | To explore the barriers to utilising HTC facilities and identify the motives and motivations of FSWs who seek HTC. | Cross-sectional qualitative study; In-depth interviews with FSWs (20); Purposive sampling. |
| Batona et al., (2015) [ | Benin | To identify psychosocial factors associated with the intention to be HIV tested. | Cross-sectional study; Questionnaire survey ( |
| Dugas et al., (2015) [ | Benin | To examine the potential of 3 different categories of outreach intervention to increase the use of testing services in Benin. | Cross-sectional ethnographic study (semi-structure interviews ( |
| Langa et al., (2014) [ | Mozambique. | To assess HIV risk perception, sexual behaviour and treatment seeking among FSWs. | In-depth semi-structured interviews & focus group discussions; |
| Nakanwagi et al., (2016) [ | Uganda | To identify the facilitators and barriers to linkage to HIV care among FSWs who tested positive to design appropriate HIV interventions for this key population group. | Cross-sectional qualitative study; In-depth interviews ( |
| Scorgie et al., (2013) [ | Kenya; Uganda; Zimbabwe; South Africa | To examine experience of key populations in seeking public and private healthcare and barriers to accessing these services. | Cross sectional qualitative study; In-depth interviews ( |
| Lafort et al., (2016) [ | Kenya, Mozambique; South Africa | To assess where FSW go for care in different settings, and what motivates their choice. | Multi-site cross-sectional survey (South Africa ( |
| Lafort (2016) [ | Mozambique | Assess factors that facilitate or hinder utilisation of HIV and sexual and reproductive health services among FSWs. | Cross-sectional survey ( |
| Luseno et al., (2009), [ | South Africa | To identify factors that facilitates or hinders HIV testing among South African women with high risk for HIV infection. | Randomised trial; baseline data ( |
| Mulongo et al. (2015) [ | Democratic Republic of Congo | To assess the impact of community-based prevention and HIV counselling and testing approaches in reaching FSWs with prevention messaging and treatment options. | Participatory appraisal including follow-up testing, care, and treatment to HIV positive individuals; Snowball sampling |
| Renzaho et al., (2009) [ | Tanzania | To explore the knowledge and practices about HIV among female sex workers (CSWs) and assess the contextual dynamics that prevent safer sexual behaviours. | Semi-structured face-to-face interviews (=54) & discrete focus group discussions ( |
| Chanda et al., (2017) [ | Zambia | To explore perceived barriers and facilitators of HIV testing among FSWs | Cross-sectional; focus groups ( |
| Wanyenze et al., (2017) [ | Uganda | To explore barriers to HIV service access and opportunities for increasing access to services | Cross-sectional study; focus group discussion (FGD) ( |
| Nyblade et al., (2017) [ | Kenya | To explore the relationship between healthcare worker sex-work stigma and HIV counselling and testing & utilisation of non-HIV health services among female and male sex workers | Cross-sectional survey; snowball sample of 497 FSWs |
The thematic focus of selected studies (based on conceptual framework developed by Levesque et al.)
| Study ID | Reported dimensions of access to voluntary HTC | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Aho et al., (2011) [ | √ | √ | |||
| Ameyan et al. (2015) [ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ |
| Batona et al., (2015) [ | √ | √ | |||
| Dugas et al.,(2015) [ | √ | √ | |||
| Langa etal., (2014) [ | √ | √ | |||
| Nakanwagi et al., (2016) [ | √ | √ | √ | ||
| Scorgie et al., (2013) [ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ |
| Lafort et al., (2016) [ | √ | √ | √ | ||
| Lafort et al., (2016) [ | √ | √ | √ | ||
| Luseno et al., (2009), [ | √ | √ | |||
| Mulongo et al., (2015) [ | √ | √ | √ | √ | |
| Renzaho et al., (2009) [ | √ | √ | |||
| Chanda et al., (2017) [ | √ | √ | √ | ||
| Wanyenze et al., (2017) [ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ |
| Nyblade et al., (2017) [ | √ | ||||