| Literature DB >> 33015174 |
Getnet Gedefaw1, Adam Wondmieneh2, Asmamaw Demis2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Preventing unintended pregnancies among HIV positive women has a vital role to prevent mother to child transmission. Besides, increasing access to contraceptives has a number of economical importance and reducing the costs for mitigating the unintended pregnancy consequences. Therefore, this study is aimed at assessing the contraceptive use and method of preference among HIV positive women in Ethiopia.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33015174 PMCID: PMC7520013 DOI: 10.1155/2020/6465242
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Search for MEDLINE/PubMed and Google Scholar databases to assess contraceptive use among HIV positive women in Ethiopia.
| Databases | Searching terms | Number of studies |
|---|---|---|
| MEDLINE/PubMed | “Contraceptive use” OR “uptake of contraceptive” OR “utilization of family planning,” OR “modern contraceptive use” OR “contraceptive preference,” OR “met need of family planning,” OR “uptake of family planning” AND “among women living with HIV/AIDS,” OR “among sexually active women living with HIV/AIDS” | 356 |
| Google scholar | “Contraceptive use” or “modern contraceptive use” and “determinants” or “associated factors” and “HIV positive women” and “Ethiopia” | 138 |
| From other databases | 83 | |
| Total retrieved articles | 577 | |
| Number of included studies | 19 |
Figure 1Flow chart of selection for systematic review and meta-analysis of contraceptive use among HIV positive women in Ethiopia.
Study characteristics included in the systematic review and meta-analysis.
| Authors | Publication year | Region | Study design | Sample size | % | Contraceptive preference (%) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pill | Injectable | Implant | IUD | Condom | Quality | ||||||
| Derek et al. [ | 2019 | AA | C-S | 548 | 39.05 | 8.10 | 17.20 | — | 18.00 | 42.60 | Low risk |
| Kebede et al. [ | 2019 | Amhara | C-S | 632 | 61.39 | 9.30 | 51.50 | 29.40 | 2.80 | 7.00 | Low risk |
| Kebede et al. [ | 2015 | Amhara | C-S | 416 | 80.05 | 6.70 | 54.70 | 17.70 | 1.80 | 52.00 | Low risk |
| Alene and Atalell [ | 2018 | Amhara | C-S | 803 | 30.14 | 4.90 | 42.80 | 11.10 | 6.20 | 32.90 | Low risk |
| Mersha et al. [ | 2019 | Amhara | C-S | 314 | 93.63 | 7.00 | 25.80 | 5.10 | 28.40 | 26.70 | Low risk |
| Melaku YA and Zeleke EG [ | 2014 | Tigray | C-S | 847 | 44.27 | 2.70 | 70.70 | 8.60 | — | 47.60 | Low risk |
| Berhane et al. [ | 2013 | Tigray | C-S | 364 | 46.15 | 4.20 | 22.70 | 2.40 | 19.00 | — | Low risk |
| Lemeneh T. [ | 2016 | AA | C-S | 682 | 88.27 | 9.40 | 32.00 | 24.70 | 9.80 | 21.30 | Low risk |
| Mitiku K. [ | 2017 | SNNPR | C-S | 382 | 64.14 | 10.20 | 64.90 | 9.80 | 2.40 | 31.40 | Low risk |
| Demissie and Tolossa [ | 2014 | SNNPR | C-S | 380 | 62.11 | 5.50 | 26.30 | 3.80 | — | 90.70 | Low risk |
| Ayalew et al. [ | 2019 | Amhara | C-S | 308 | 38.31 | — | — | — | — | — | Low risk |
| Zewdie et al. [ | 2020 | Amhara | C-S | 518 | 68.15 | 8.00 | 32.60 | 35.90 | 14.20 | 8.20 | Low risk |
| Abeje and Motbaynor [ | 2016 | Amhara | C-S | 530 | 45.66 | 7.40 | 74.40 | 3.70 | 4.50 | 10.30 | Low risk |
| Asfaw and Gashe [ | 2014 | AA | C-S | 1418 | 71.02 | — | 30.50 | — | — | 45.70 | Low risk |
| Polisi et al. [ | 2014 | Oromia | C-S | 395 | 56.71 | 8.90 | 11.20 | 9.40 | 2.70 | 34.40 | Low risk |
| Abubeker et al. [ | 2019 | AA | C-S | 334 | 33.53 | 13.40 | 22.30 | 33.00 | 6.30 | 20.50 | Low risk |
| Lemma and Mekonnen [ | 2014 | SNNPR | C-S | 397 | 57.68 | 1.80 | 8.80 | 3.50 | 0.80 | 35.80 | Low risk |
| Worke et al. [ | 2016 | Amhara | C-S | 397 | 50.38 | 12.40 | 48.50 | 16.50 | 1.50 | 8.20 | Low risk |
| Sufa A. [ | 2013 | Oromia | C-S | 456 | 66.45 | 4.30 | 11.70 | 1.70 | 18.00 | 41.60 | Low risk |
C-S: cross-sectional; SNNPR: Southern nation nationalities and peoples representatives; AA: Addis Ababa.
Figure 2Forest plot of the pooled prevalence of contraceptive use among HIV positive women in Ethiopia.
Contraceptive method preference of HIV positive women in Ethiopia.
| Type of post abortion family planning methods | Pooled prevalence 95% |
|
|---|---|---|
| Oral contraceptive pills (OCP) | 6.91 (5.38-8.44) | 79.9, |
| Injectable | 36.00 (26.64-45.35) | 98.6, |
| Implants | 13.10 (8.82-17.38) | 97.0, |
| Intrauterine devices (IUD) | 7.76 (5.13-10.38) | 94.7, |
| Male condom | 32.74 (21.08-44.40) | 99.2, |
Figure 3(a) Funnel plot to test publication bias of 19 studies. (b) Result of trim and fill analysis for adjusting publication bias of the 20 studies.
Sensitivity analysis of the prevalence of contraceptive use among HIV positive women in Ethiopia.
| Study omitted | Prevalence | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|
| Derek et al. (2019) | 58.82 | 49.42-68.23 |
| Kebede et al. (2019) | 57.57 | 47.79-67.36 |
| Kebede et al. (2015) | 56.54 | 46.94-66.14 |
| Alene and Atalell (2018) | 59.33 | 50.59-68.07 |
| Mersha et al. (2019) | 55.78 | 47.13-64.43 |
| Melaku YA and Zeleke EG (2014) | 58.53 | 48.99-68.07 |
| Berhane et al. (2013) | 58.42 | 48.87-67.97 |
| Lemeneh T. (2016) | 56.07 | 47.12-65.03 |
| Mitiku K. (2017) | 57.43 | 47.74-67.11 |
| Demissie and Tolossa (2014) | 57.54 | 47.86-67.21 |
| Ayalew et al. (2019) | 58.85 | 49.41-68.29 |
| Zewdie et al. (2020) | 57.20 | 47.46-66.94 |
| Abeje and Motbaynor (2016) | 58.45 | 48.89-68.02 |
| Asfaw and Gashe (2014) | 57.03 | 46.94-67.12 |
| Polisi et al. (2014) | 57.84 | 48.18-67.49 |
| Abubeker et al. (2019) | 59.12 | 49.78-68.45 |
| Lemma and Mekonnen (2014) | 57.78 | 48.12-67.45 |
| Worke et al. (2016) | 58.19 | 48.58-67.79 |
| Sufa A. (2013) | 57.29 | 47.58-67.01 |
Subgroup analysis of contraceptive use among HIV positive women in Ethiopia.
| Variables | Characteristics | Included studies | Number of study participants | Prevalence with (95% CI) |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample size | >500 | 8 | 5978 | 56.02 (41.05-70.98) | 99.4, <0.001 |
| <500 | 11 | 4143 | 59.07 (46.88-71.25) | 98.8, <0.001 | |
| Region | AA | 4 | 2982 | 58.05 (34.99-81.11) | 99.5, <0.001 |
| Amhara | 8 | 3918 | 58.49 (41.16-75.82) | 99.4, <0.001 | |
| Oromia | 2 | 851 | 61.65 (52.10-71.19) | 88.3, =0.003 | |
| SNNPR | 3 | 1159 | 61.32 (57.58-65.06) | 44.1, =0.167 | |
| Tigray | 2 | 1211 | 44.83 (42.03-47.63) | — | |
| Overall | 19 | 10,121 | 57.78 (48.53-67.03) | 99.1, <0.001 | |
Figure 4Forest plot showing the pooled odds ratio of the associations between contraceptive use and its determinants: (a) discussion with partner, (b) disclosing HIV status, (c) counseling on contraceptive, (d) having more than one child, (e) secondary and above education, and (f) being widowed/separated.