| Literature DB >> 30869646 |
Paul Douglas Wesson1, Rajatashuvra Adhikary2, Anna Jonas3,4, Krysta Gerndt5, Ali Mirzazadeh6, Frieda Katuta3, Andrew Maher5, Karen Banda5, Nicholus Mutenda3, Willi McFarland6, David Lowrance4, Dimitri Prybylski4, Sadhna Patel4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Key populations, including female sex workers (FSWs), are at a disproportionately high risk for HIV infection. Estimates of the size of these populations serve as denominator data to inform HIV prevention and treatment programming and are necessary for the equitable allocation of limited public health resources.Entities:
Keywords: human immunodeficiency virus; population density; sex workers; social networking; vulnerable populations
Year: 2019 PMID: 30869646 PMCID: PMC6437614 DOI: 10.2196/11737
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Public Health Surveill ISSN: 2369-2960
Figure 1Equations: (a) Reverse Tracking Method, (b) Respondent-driven sampling adjusted Reverse Tracking Method, and (c) simplified Respondent-driven sampling adjusted Reverse Tracking Method.
Figure 2Respondent-driven sampling adjusted reverse tracking method equation (complete and simplified). Correction factors are calculated from the simulated distributions, from which the 2.5 percentile and 97.5 percentile are used to calculate 95% simulation intervals. Key: Ŝ=the estimated population size; n=the number of venues visited on the second visit; Ni=the number of people observed at venue i on the second visit; Mi=the number of people observed at venue i on the first visit; M=the total number of people observed at all venues on the first visit; R*=the sum of the number of times that a mapped venue is reported from the venue inquiry questions; RDS=the RDS sample size; r=the proportion of the RDS sample that reports not going to any venues; p=the proportion of the RDS sample that report attending a mapped venue; s=the proportion of venue-attending RDS participants who attend two venues; t=the proportion of venue-attending RDS participants who attend three venues.
Demographics and descriptive statistics for respondent-driven sampling sample of female sex workers in Katima Mulilo and Windhoek, Namibia (because of rounding, percentages may not sum to 100%).
| RDSa participant characteristics | Katima Mulilo | Windhoek | |||
| n | RDS Adjusted % (95% CI) | n | RDS Adjusted % (95% CI) | ||
| Age (years), mean (minimum-maximum) | 309 | 27.3 (18-53) | 316 | 30.3 (18-65) | |
| Primary/less than primary | 89 | 28.6 (22.9-34.1) | 116 | 36.7 (30.6-42.7) | |
| Secondary | 219 | 71.1 (70.4-71.7) | 198 | 62.6 (61.9-63.3) | |
| Vocational/Technical | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0.7 (0.0-6.8) | |
| <5 | 186 | 60.9 (55.1-66.9) | 139 | 42.6 (36.8-48.4) | |
| 5-9 | 88 | 27.9 (22.9-32.8) | 94 | 30.9 (25.2-36.5) | |
| 10-14 | 19 | 6.4 (3.6-9.2) | 24 | 7.4 (4.3-10.4) | |
| >15 | 16 | 4.8 (2.1-7.4) | 59 | 19.2 (15.0-23.3) | |
| Never married | 250 | 81.6 (77.2-86.1) | 276 | 87.8 (83.5-92.1) | |
| Previously or currently married | 59 | 18.4 (14.0-22.8) | 40 | 12.2 (7.9-16.5) | |
| Positive | 177 | 56.8 (50.1-63.4) | 103 | 32.6 (26.7-38.5) | |
| Negative | 131 | 43.0 (36.3-49.6) | 206 | 65.7 (59.7-71.7) | |
| I do not go to venues | 56 | 17.0 (11.5-22.4) | 100 | 31.6 (26.1-37.2) | |
| 1 venue | 32 | 11.1 (7.2-15.0) | 84 | 27.9 (22.5-33.4) | |
| 2 venues | 106 | 35.0 (28.7-40.3) | 80 | 24.8 (19.7-30.0) | |
| 3 venues | 115 | 37.4 (31.8-43.1) | 51 | 15.2 (11.0-20.0) | |
| Refuse to Answer | —c | 1 | —c | ||
| Yes | 127 | 42.3 (35.1-49.5) | 122 | 37.6 (30.2-44.9) | |
| No | 182 | 57.7 (50.5-64.9) | 194 | 62.4 (55.1-69.8) | |
| C1: standardization parameter | 2.36d | 2.66 | |||
| C2: visibility parameter | 1.96 | 1.82 | |||
| C3: hidden population parameter | 1.21 | 1.46 | |||
| C4: double counting parameter | 0.49 | 0.67 | |||
aRDS: respondent-driven sampling.
b§:Stratified counts do not sum to N because of indeterminate HIV test results.
cNot applicable.
d95% CI values are not applicable.
Figure 3Respondent-driven sampling recruitment tree of female sex workers in Katima Mulilo, Namibia and Windhoek, Namibia. Large nodes indicate participants who report not attending venues to find clients.
Population size estimates of female sex workers by study site and population size estimation method (we use “Acceptable bounds” here as an umbrella term as some methods report 95% CIs, other methods report plausibility bounds, and the respondent-driven sampling adjusted reverse tracking method reports 95% simulation intervals).
| Study site and population size estimates method | Estimated number of FSWsa (acceptable bounds) | Estimated percentage of adult (15 to 49 years) female population who are FSWs (acceptable bounds) | |
| Stakeholder consensusb | 3000 (1800-3400) | 2.2 (2.0-3.6) | |
| Reverse tracking method | 492 (418-565) | 0.56 (0.48-0.64) | |
| RadRc | 1552 (1101-2387) | 1.77 (1.25-2.72) | |
| Stakeholder consensus | 800 (380-2,000) | 8.6 (4.1-21.5) | |
| Reverse tracking method | 192 (181-203) | 2.06 (1.95-2.18) | |
| RadR | 453 (336-656) | 4.85 (3.60-7.03) | |
aFSWs: female sex workers.
bThe stakeholder consensus was informed by the following population size estimates methods: key informant interview, unique object multiplier, wisdom of the crowd, and literature review.
cRadR: respondent-driven sampling adjusted reverse tracking method.