| Literature DB >> 32303233 |
J Craig Phillips1, Josephine Etowa2, Jean Hannan3, Egbe B Etowa2, Seye Babatunde4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: WHO guidelines recommend breastfeeding for mothers living with HIV adherent to antiretroviral therapy in countries where formula is not accessible. In Canada and the US, guidelines for mothers living with HIV recommend exclusive formula feeding. Awareness of national infant feeding guidelines and socio-cultural factors influence infant feeding choices that may result in an increased risk of vertical transmission of HIV. The purpose of this paper is to present factors associated with awareness of guidelines among Black mothers living with HIV. Data were derived from a survey conducted as part of a recent international study that examined infant feeding practices among Black women living with HIV in Ottawa, Canada; Port Harcourt, Nigeria; and Miami, Florida.Entities:
Keywords: Awareness of guidelines; Black mothers; Exclusive breastfeeding; Exclusive formula feeding; HIV; HIV criminalization; HIV-positive mother; Infant feeding guidelines; Maternal-child health; Motherhood
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32303233 PMCID: PMC7165374 DOI: 10.1186/s13006-020-00274-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Breastfeed J ISSN: 1746-4358 Impact factor: 3.461
Socio-demographic characteristics of Black mothers living with HIV (N = 690)
| Characteristic | Port Harcourt | Miami | Ottawa | All Sites |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age ( | 34.7 ± 5.7 | 32.4 ± 5.8 | 36.6 ± 6.4 | 34.3 ± 5.9 |
| Years since HIV diagnosis ( | 6.3 ± 3.5 | 11.4 ± 7.2 | 12.7 ± 6.4 | 8.1 ± 5.6 |
| Persons in household (Mdn; IQR; range) | 4; 2; 1–11 | 3; 2; 1–9 | 4; 3; 1–6 | 4; 2; 1–11 |
| Number of children (Mdn; IQR; range) | 2; 2; 1–8 | 2; 2; 1–4 | 2; 2; 1–5 | 2; 2; 1–8 |
| Number of children born after HIV diagnosis (Mdn; IQR; range) | 1; 1; 1–5 | 1; 1; 1–3 | 2; 1; 1–3 | 1; 1; 1–5 |
| Mothers on HIV treatment: | 399 (99.8) | 187 (97.4) | 50 (96.2) | 636 (98.8) |
| Married: | 340 (85.2) | 121 (60.8) | 29 (33.3) | 490 (71.5) |
| Completed at least secondary education: | 352 (89.3) | 196 (98.5) | 84 (95.5) | 632 (92.8) |
| Employed full or part time: | 321 (88.2) | 70 (35.2) | 60 (67.4) | 451 (69.2) |
μ Mean, IQR Interquartile range, Mdn Median, SD Standard deviation
HIV status disclosure and awareness of national infant feeding guidelines and vertical transmission of HIV among Black mothers living with HIV (N = 690)
| Indicator | Port Harcourt | Miami | Ottawa | All Sites |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HIV status disclosure | ||||
| Spouse/partner aware of respondents’ HIV status | 397 (99.5) | 132 (67.0) | 81 (92.0) | 610 (92.1) |
| Family aware of respondents’ HIV status | 272 (68.0) | 149 (80.5) | 35 (39.8) | 456 (67.2) |
| Received information about national infant feeding policy from health worker | 334 (93.3) | 116 (67.4) | 50 (57.5) | 500 (72.5) |
| Rated health workers opinion on infant feeding choices as important | 393 (99.0) | 170 (93.4) | 89 (100.0) | 652 (97.6) |
| Aware of national infant feeding guideline for mothers living with HIV | 362 (90.5) | 144 (72.4) | 78 (87.6) | 584 (85) |
| HIV transmission awareness | ||||
| Aware HIV can be transmitted from mother to child during pregnancy | 352 (88.0) | 136 (74.3) | 54 (61.4) | 542 (80.8) |
| Aware HIV can be transmitted from mother to child during delivery | 355 (88.8) | 130 (67.7) | 63 (72.4) | 548 (80.7) |
| Aware HIV can be transmitted from mother to child during breastfeeding | 353 (88.3) | 156 (80.4) | 63 (72.4) | 572 (84.0) |
GLM univariate ANOVA for variables included in hierarchical binary logistic regression
| Outcome variable: awareness of national guideline on infant feeding when living with HIV (aware = 1, otherwise = 0) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Predictor variable | MS | ||||
| Country of residence (Canada/USA = 1, Nigeria = 0) | 1 | .00 | .02 | .877 | .00 |
| Age (years) | 27 | .02 | .68 | .865 | .20 |
| Formal education (years) | 5 | .04 | 1.60 | .171 | .10 |
| Marital status (married = 1, otherwise = 0) | 1 | .00 | .00 | .969 | .00 |
| HIV status disclosed to spouse (yes = 1, no = 0) | 1 | .05 | 2.06 | .156 | .03 |
| HIV status disclosed to other family members (yes = 1, no = 0) | 1 | .05 | 2.14 | .147 | .03 |
| Spouse’s opinion influenced IF choices | 1 | .01 | .26 | .610 | .00 |
| Other family members’ opinion influenced IF choices | 1 | .00 | .00 | .952 | .00 |
| Health provider’s opinion influenced IF choices | 1 | .02 | .69 | .408 | .01 |
| Country*age | 25 | .01 | .34 | .998 | .10 |
| Country*marital status | 1 | .00 | .01 | .905 | .00 |
| Country*formal education | 5 | .00 | .18 | .969 | .01 |
| Country*HIV disclosure to spouse | 1 | .00 | .03 | .872 | .00 |
| Country*HIV disclosure to other family members | 1 | .00 | .08 | .778 | .00 |
| Country*spouse’s opinion influenced IF choices | 1 | .00 | .07 | .788 | .00 |
| Country*other family members’ opinion influenced IF choices | 1 | .02 | .82 | .369 | .01 |
| Country*health provider’s opinion influenced IF choices | 1 | .00 | .16 | .693 | .00 |
| Country*influence of cultural beliefs influenced IF choices | 1 | .00 | .08 | .780 | .00 |
| Country*functional social support | 26 | .01 | .39 | .996 | .12 |
| Intercept | 1 | .55 | 22.90 | .000 | .24 |
| Corrected Model | 133 | .04 | 1.87 | .002 | .77 |
MS Mean squares, η Effect size, IF Infant feeding. Statistically significant (α = .05) variables are bolded
R = .771 (Adjusted R = .359)
Hierarchical binary logistic regression model of associations between socio-cultural factors and awareness of infant feeding guidelines among Black mothers living with HIV (n = 416)
| Dependent Variable: Black Mothers’ awareness of the guideline (1 = correct, 0 = wrong) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Independent variables | EXP(B) | SE | Wald stat | 95% C.I. for EXP(B) | |
| Years of formal education | 0.761 | 0.169 | 2.605 | 0.106 | 0.55–1.06 |
| Marital status (1 = married, 0 = Single, widowed, divorced or separated) | 0.409 | 0.674 | 1.759 | 0.185 | 0.11–1.53 |
| Country of residence (1 = Canada or US, 0 = Nigeria) | 0.326 | 0.860 | 1.701 | 0.192 | 0.06–1.76 |
| Disclosure of HIV Status to spouse, partner or the baby’s father (1 = yes, 0 = No) | 2.072 | 0.720 | 1.024 | 0.312 | 0.51–8.50 |
| Disclosure of HIV Status to other family members (1 = yes, 0 = No) | 0.687 | 0.387 | 0.603 | 0.534 | 0.21–2.24 |
| Baby’s father’s opinion influenced infant feeding choices (1 = important, 0 = unimportant) | 1.246 | 0.672 | 0.107 | 0.744 | 0.33–4.65 |
| Family member’s opinion influenced infant feeding choices (1 = I care, 0 = I don’t care) | 1.478 | 0.651 | 0.360 | 0.549 | 0.41–5.30 |
| Constant | 20,604.34 | 3.218 | 9.531 | 0.002 | |
| Model accuracy = 95.5%; accuracy of alternative model with outliers = 87.5%. | |||||
Statistically significant (α = .05) variables are bolded