| Literature DB >> 31694616 |
Elia John Mmbaga1, Germana Henry Leyna2, Melkizedeck Thomas Leshabari3, Britt Tersbøl4, Theis Lange3,4, Neema Makyao5, Kåre Moen6, Dan Wolf Meyrowitsch4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While there are indications of declining HIV infection rates in the general population globally, Tanzania included, men who have sex with men (MSM), female sex workers (FSW) and people who inject drugs (PWID), now called Key Populations (KP) for HIV epidemic have 2-20 times higher infections rates and contributes up to 30% of new HIV infection. Tanzania have developed a Comprehensive Guideline for HIV prevention among key population (CHIP) to address the epidemic among KPs. However, these populations are stigmatized and discriminated calling for innovative approaches to improve access to CHIP. This project seeks to test the effectiveness of healthcare workers and peer-to-peer engagement in promoting access to CHIP among HIV at risk populations in Tanzania.Entities:
Keywords: HIV; Health services access; Injecting drugs; Men who have sex with men; Sex work; Tanzania
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31694616 PMCID: PMC6833197 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-019-4675-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Participants Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
| Population | Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Men who have sex with men | 1. Have regular of occasional sexual prelateship with other men (man) 2. Had sex with a man during past 3 months 3. Aged 18 and above | 1. Refuse to provide informed consent 2. Mentally ill or severely ill 3. Not a resident of participating region (have an address and lived in the region during the past 6 months) |
| Female sex workers | 1. Exchange sex for goods or money 2. Have exchanged sex for goods or money during past 3 months 3. Aged 18 and above | 1. Refuse to provide informed consent 2. Mentally ill or severely ill 3. Not a resident of participating region (have an address and lived in the region during the past 6 months) |
| People who inject drugs | 1. Inject illicit drugs 2. Have injected drugs during past 3 months 3. Aged 18 and above | 1. Refuse to provide informed consent 2. Mentally ill or severely ill 3. Not a resident of participating region (have an address and lived in the region during the past 6 months) |
Fig. 1Summary of Project timelines
Pull and Push Factors Affecting Health Services Access among Key Populations
| Individual | Societal/community | Health system |
|---|---|---|
• Economic status • Socio-demographic characteristics (e.g. education, marital status, age) • Knowledge about CHIP • Individual stigma • Perception of health care worker’s/health system • Attitude towards health care system • Access to health related media • Medical history • Individual experience with health care workers • KP service satisfaction • Experience with violence • Experience with service integration • Opinion on CHIP integration | • Stigma and discrimination • Community perception about KP • Community support to KP • Community opinion on the health needs of KPs • Social connectedness • Community opinions on sharing health services /facilities with members of the KP • Availability of safe KP congregation areas • Community violence and abuse towards KPs | • Distance to health facility • Patient load • Number of health care workers • Health care workers training on sexual and reproductive health issues • Availability of CHIP guidelines • Health care worker’s knowledge on the CHIP guidelines • Health care worker’s perception on KP • Health care worker’s stigma towards KP • Health care worker’s attitude towards KP • Commodity (condom, antibiotics for STI, antiretroviral, contraceptives etc.) stock out • Opinion on KP service integration • Experience with other service integration |