| Literature DB >> 32552722 |
Soori Nnko1, Daniel Nyato2, Evodius Kuringe2, Caterina Casalini3, Amani Shao2, Albert Komba3, John Changalucha2, Mwita Wambura2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: HIV testing is a gateway to HIV care and treatment for people diagnosed with HIV and can link those with negative results to HIV preventive services. Despite the importance of HIV testing services (HTS) in HIV control, uptake of HTS among female sex workers (FSWs) across sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) remains sub-optimal. Concerns about stigma associated with sex work and fear of loss of livelihood if HIV status becomes known, are some of the restrictions for FSWs to utilize HTS offered through health care facilities. Introduction of HIV self-testing (HIVST) may mitigate some of the barriers for the uptake of HTS. This study explored the acceptability of FSWs towards the introduction of HIVST in Tanzania.Entities:
Keywords: Female sex workers, acceptability, exploratory study; HIV self-testing; Tanzania
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32552722 PMCID: PMC7301461 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-020-09105-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Example of themes, analytical categories and subcategories developed for the data analysis
| Domain | Themes (main topics) | Analytical categories | Analytical subcategories |
|---|---|---|---|
| Individual | Participants attributes | Socio-economic attributes | Family backgrounds; |
| Level of education; age; residence | |||
| Level of income | |||
Awareness toward HTS Access to HTS and health care delivery points | Knowledge and perceptions toward HTS and HIVST | Attitude toward HTS | |
| Awareness about HIVST | |||
| Societal | Rumour toward HIVST | ||
| Individual | Previous experience to HTS | ||
| HIV risk perceptions | |||
| Institutional | Availability of services | Accessibility to delivery points | |
| Quality of the service | Attitude of health care workers | ||
| Privacy of the client | |||
| Self-determination of clients | |||
| Societal | Barriers to HIVST | HIV stigma | Concern about social support |
| Individual | Self-efficacy | Concern about user’ error | |
| Societal | Social norms toward HIV | Negative narratives about HIV | |
| Fear about a reactive test |
Participants socio-demographic characteristics (n = 227)
| Variable | Median [Range] or N (%) |
|---|---|
| 24 [18–42] | |
| Single | 106 (46.7) |
| Living with a permanent partner (cohabiting/married) | 89 (39.2) |
| Divorced | 24 (10.6) |
| Widow | 8 (3.5) |
| None | 43 (18.9) |
| 1 child | 106 (46.7) |
| ≥ 2 children | 78 (34.4) |
| Never attend formal education | 18 (8) |
| Completed some primary school | 117 (51.5) |
| Secondary school | 80 (35.2) |
| Post-secondary education | 12 (5.3) |
| Less than 1 year | 43 (18.9) |
| 1–3 years | 109 (48) |
| > 3 years | 37 (16.4) |
| Cannot remember | 38 (16.7) |
| Streets / roadsides | 48 (21.1) |
| Recreational facilities | 143 (63.1) |
| Homes or brothels (private venue) | 28 (12.3) |
| Social media (e.g. websites) | 8 (3.5) |