| Literature DB >> 31312312 |
Joseph Ngonzi1, Godfrey Mugyenyi1, Mukasa Kivunike1, Julius Mugisha1, Wasswa Salongo1, Sezalio Masembe1, Ronald Mayanja1, Francis Bajunirwe2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Positive HIV results disclosure plays a significant role in the successful prevention and care of HIV infected patients. It provides significant social and health benefits to the individual and the community. Non-disclosure is one of the contextual factors driving the HIV epidemic in Uganda. Study objectives: to determine the frequency of HIV disclosure, associated factors and disclosure outcomes among HIV positive pregnant women at Mbarara Hospital, southwestern Uganda.Entities:
Keywords: Disclosure; HIV/AIDS; Mbarara University; Mbarara hospital; Uganda; factors associated
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31312312 PMCID: PMC6620078 DOI: 10.11604/pamj.2019.32.200.12541
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pan Afr Med J
The socio-demographic characteristics in relation to disclosure
| Variables | Non-disclosure n=15 (%) | Disclosed n=88 (%) | P-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Below 18 | 1(6.7) | 5 (5.6%) | 0.40 |
| 26-35 | 6 (40) | 43 (48.9%) | 0.05 |
| 18-25 | 8 (53.3) | 40 (45.5%) | |
| Catholic | 6 (40) | 32 (36.4%) | |
| Anglican | 7 (47) | 44 (50%) | 0.20 |
| Others | 2 (6.5) | 12 (12.5%) | 0.64 |
| No formal or Primary | 10 (66.7) | 58 (66%) | 0.03 |
| Post-primary | 5 (33.3) | 30 (33%) | |
| Married monogamously | 9 (60) | 57 (64.8%) | 0.26 |
| Married polygamously | 3 (20) | 27 (30.7%) | 0.51 |
| Others (Single/Separated) | 3 (20) | 4 (4.5%) | |
| Prime gravida | 5 (33.3) | 26 (29.5%) | |
| Multipara (2-4) | 9 (60) | 55 (62.5%) | 0.41 |
| Grand multipara (5 or more) | 1 (6.7) | 7 (8%) | 0.65 |
| Nuclear family | 74 (71.8) | 62 (70.5%) | 0.45 |
| Extended family | 29 (28.2) | 26 (29.5%) | |
| Residence | |||
| Urban | 10 (66.7) | 44 (50%) | 0.02 |
| Rural | 5 (33.3) | 44 (50%) | |
| Unemployed | 9 (60) | 53 (60.2%) | 0.83 |
| Informal sector | 4 26.7) | 29 (33%) | 0.38 |
| Formal/skilled | 2 (13.3) | 6 (6.8%) | |
| Less than 50,000 | 4 (26.6) | 25 (28.4%) | |
| 50,000-100,000 | 7 (46.7) | 39 (44.3%) | 0.53 |
| More than 100,000 | 4 (26.7) | 24 (27.3%) | 0.76 |
Frequency and timing of disclosure among women attending antenatal clinic at Mbarara Regional Referral Hospital
| Variable | Frequency (percent %) N (%) |
|---|---|
| Yes | 88 (85.4) |
| No | 15 (14.6) |
| Less than 2months | 70 (79.5) |
| 2-5months | 10 (11.4) |
| 6 or more months | 8 (9.1) |
Factors that motivated disclosure among pregnant women who disclosed their HIV sero-status, Mbarara Hospital, Uganda (n = 88)
| Factors motivating disclosure | Frequency (percent %) |
|---|---|
| He had disclosed to me | 24 (27.3) |
| He was caring | 24 (27.3) |
| I was financially stable | 7 (8.0) |
| Wanted safer sex | 11 (12.5) |
| Encouraged by health worker | 22 (25.0) |
Factors associated with disclosure of HIV among pregnant women attending antenatal clinic at Mbarara Regional Referral Hospital
| Variable | Odds Ratio (95%CI) | P-value |
|---|---|---|
| Less than 18 | 2.9 (0.25-33.07) | 0.40 |
| 26-35 | 3.9 (1.03-15.16) | 0.05 |
| 18-25 | 1 | |
| No formal or Primary education | 3.53 (1.10-11.307) | 0.03 |
| Post primary | 1 | |
| Urban | 4.22 (1.27-14.01) | 0.02 |
| Rural | 1 |