| Literature DB >> 33661426 |
N Bandopadhay1, G B Woelk2, M P Kieffer3, D Mpofu3.
Abstract
The ACCLAIM Study aimed to assess the effect of a package of community interventions on the demand for, uptake of, and retention of HIV-positive pregnant/postpartum women in maternal and child health (MCH) and prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission (PMTCT) services. The study occurred from 2013 to 2015 in Eswatini, Uganda, and Zimbabwe. The three interventions were: (1) a social learning and action component for community leaders, (2) community days, and (3) peer discussion groups. Household cross-sectional surveys on community members' MCH and PMTCT knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs were analyzed pre- and post-intervention, using MCH, HIV stigma, and gender-equitable men (GEM) indicators. We used t-tests to measure the significance of mean pre- vs. post-intervention score changes stratified by gender within each intervention arm and generalized linear models to compare mean score changes of the cumulative intervention arms with the community leaders-only intervention. Response rates were over 85% for both surveys for men and women, with a total of 3337 pre-intervention and 3162 post-intervention responses. The combined package of three interventions demonstrated a significantly greater increase in MCH scores for both women (diff = 1.34, p ≤ 0.001) and men (diff = 2.03, p < 0.001). The arms that included interventions for both community leader engagement and community days (arms 2 and 3)led to a greater increase in mean GEM scores compared to the community leader engagement intervention alone (arm 1), for both women (diff = 1.32, p = 0.002) and men (diff = 1.37, p = 0.004). Our findings suggest that a package of community interventions may be most effective in increasing community MCH/HIV knowledge and improving gender-equitable norms.Entities:
Keywords: Community interventions; Gender; HIV stigma; HIV/AIDS; KAB; Maternal and child health; PMTCT
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33661426 PMCID: PMC8222038 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-021-03202-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165
Fig. 1Trial design.
Reprinted from “Evaluating the effectiveness of selected community-level interventions on key maternal, child health, and prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV outcomes in three countries (the ACCLAIM project): a study protocol for a randomized controlled trial,” by Woelk, G.B., Kieffer, M.P., Walker, D., Mpofu, D., Machekano, R., and the Project ACCLAIM study group. Trials, 17(88) 2016, p.5
Survey questions used for outcome scores
| Questions used for MCH beliefs scores |
| Vaginal bleeding during pregnancy is caused by pregnant mother working too hard |
| Maternal or infant death is caused by evil spirits or breaking taboos |
| I believe in my ability to plan for the safe delivery for myself and my child |
| Community members would agree that ensuring healthy outcomes for every mother and child in the village is a priority for this community |
| There are skilled community members who would be willing to work together to solve the problems that prevent healthy outcomes for every mother and child in this community |
| Questions used for HIV stigma scores |
| Most people in this community would want to keep it a secret if a member of their family had HIV |
| If a health worker is HIV-positive, I don’t think they should be allowed to treat patients |
| HIV/AIDS is the result of sinning |
| People with HIV/AIDS should be allowed to fully participate in social events in this community |
| People living with HIV/AIDS should not be ashamed |
| Questions used for gender-equitable norms scores |
| It is the man who decides what type of sex to have |
| It is a woman’s responsibility to avoid getting pregnant |
| A man should have the final word about decisions in his home |
| There are times when a woman deserves to be beaten |
| Men in the community see it as unmanly to be involved in issues related to their partner’s pregnancy and childbirth |
Demographic characteristics of survey participants by country
| Women | Men | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zimbabwe | Uganda | Eswatini | Total | Zimbabwe | Uganda | Eswatini | Total | |
| n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | |
| Age (mean, SD) | 36.4 (12.1) | 35.8 (11.0) | 34.7 (11.2) | 35.2 (11.5) | 39.8 (11.3) | 33.9 (12.3) | ||
| Age group (years) | ||||||||
| < 19 | 32 (4.9) | 17 (3.1) | 19 (3.5) | 68 (3.9) | 23 (5.5) | 18 (3.1) | 30 (5.4) | 71 (4.5) |
| 20–29 | 196 (29.8) | 164 (29.9) | 200 (36.4) | 560 (31.8) | 136 (32.3) | 104 (17.8) | 225 (40.8) | 465 (29.9) |
| 30–39 | 185 (28.1) | 173 (31.1) | 150 (27.3) | 508 (28.8) | 124 (29.4) | 160 (27.4) | 129 (23.4) | 413 (26.5) |
| 40–49 | 114 (17.3) | 122 (21.9) | 105 (19.1) | 341 (19.3) | 77 (18.3) | 171 (29.3) | 77 (13.9) | 325 (20.9) |
| 50 + | 131 (19.9) | 80 (14.4) | 75 (13.7) | 286 (16.2) | 61 (14.5) | 131 (22.4) | 91 (16.5) | 283 (18.2) |
| Education | ||||||||
| Primary or less | 224 (34.0) | 446 (80.2) | 238 (43.4) | 908 (51.5) | 90 (21.4) | 380 (65.3) | 228 (41.3) | 698 (44.9) |
| Secondary or more | 434 (66.0) | 110 (19.8) | 310 (56.6) | 854 (48.5) | 330 (78.6) | 202 (34.7) | 324 (58.7) | 856 (55.1) |
| Missing | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 3 | |||
| Religion | ||||||||
| Roman Catholic | 58 (8.8) | 157 (28.8) | 12 (2.2) | 227 (12.9) | 59 (14.0) | 177 (30.4) | 15 (2.7) | 251 (16.2) |
| Protestant | 178 (27.1) | 341 (62.5) | 62 (11.3) | 581 (33.1) | 99 (23.6) | 351 (60.2) | 65 (11.8) | 515 (33.1) |
| Pentecostal | 89 (13.6) | 26 (4.8) | 220 (40.1) | 335 (19.1) | 38 (9.0) | 36 (6.2) | 143 (26.0) | 217 (14.0) |
| Apostolic Sect | 299 (45.5) | 3 (0.5) | 227 (41.4) | 529 (30.2) | 120 (28.6) | 2 (0.3) | 239 (43.4) | 361 (23.2) |
| Other | 7 (1.1) | 19 (3.4) | 9 (1.6) | 35 (2.0) | 8 (1.9) | 17 (2.9) | 15 (2.7) | 40 (2.6) |
| None | 27 (4.1) | 0 | 19 (3.4) | 46 (2.6) | 96 (22.9) | 0 | 74 (13.4) | 170 (10.9) |
| Missing | 10 | 10 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | ||
| No. of years in community | ||||||||
| < 1 | 31 (4.7) | 41 (7.4) | 15 (2.8) | 87 (5.0) | 25 (5.9) | 2 (0.3) | 10 (1.8) | 37 (2.4) |
| 1–5 | 127 (19.3) | 44 (7.9) | 87 (16.1) | 258 (14.7) | 50 (11.9) | 9 (1.4) | 44 (8.1) | 102 (6.6) |
| > 5 | 500 (76.0) | 471 (84.7) | 437 (81.1) | 1408 (80.3) | 346 (82.2) | 571 (98.3) | 489 (90.1) | 1406 (91.0) |
| Missing | 10 | 10 | ||||||
| Away from home > 1 month at a time in the past 12 months | ||||||||
| Yes | 208 (31.6) | 79 (14.2) | 116 (21.1) | 403 (22.9) | 165 (39.2) | 121 (20.9) | 163 (29.5) | 449 (28.9) |
| No | 450 (68.4) | 477 (85.9) | 433 (78.9) | 1360 (77.1) | 256 (60.8) | 459 (79.1) | 389 (70.5) | 1104 (71.1) |
| Marital status | ||||||||
| Married/living together | 489 (74.3) | 413 (74.7) | 318 (58.3) | 1220 (69.5) | 292 (69.5) | 504 (86.3) | 235 (42.8) | 1031 (66.4) |
| Never married | 30 (4.5) | 35 (6.3) | 183 (33.6) | 248 (14.1) | 100 (23.8) | 61 (10.5) | 293 (53.4) | 454 (29.2) |
| Divorced/separated | 57 (8.7) | 27 (4.9) | 8 (1.5) | 92 (5.2) | 19 (4.5) | 14 (2.4) | 10 (1.8) | 43 (2.8) |
| Widowed | 82 (12.5) | 78 (14.1) | 36 (6.6) | 196 (11.2) | 9 (2.1) | 5 (0.9) | 11 (2.0) | 25 (1.6) |
| Missing | 3 | 4 | 7 | 1 | 3 | 4 | ||
| No. in household (mean, median) | 5.34 (2.46) | 5.87 (6.00) | 6.50 (6.00) | 5.0 (2.4) | 6.3 (6.0) | 7.1 (7.0) | ||
| Main source of income | ||||||||
| Farming | 319 (48.6) | 431 (77.5) | 135 (24.6) | 885 (50.2) | 198 (47.1) | 332 (57.0) | 168 (30.5) | 698 (44.9) |
| Formal employ | 26 (3.9) | 28 (5.0) | 55 (10.0) | 109 (6.2) | 54 (12.9) | 78 (13.4) | 70 (12.7) | 202 (13.0) |
| Informal employ | 161 (24.5) | 54 (9.7) | 154 (28.1) | 369 (20.9) | 130 (31.0) | 132 (22.6) | 166 (30.1) | 428 (27.5) |
| No work, receive money from others | 144 (21.9) | 27 (4.9) | 205 (37.3) | 376 (21.3) | 36 (8.6) | 17 (2.9) | 146 (26.5) | 199 (12.8) |
| Other | 7 (1.1) | 16 (2.9) | 0 | 23 (1.3) | 2 (0.5) | 24 (4.1) | 1 (0.2) | 27 (1.7) |
| Missing | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
Indicators scores by study arm and gender, all countries combined
| All countries combined | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Difference (t-test) between pre-post intervention (95% CI) | P value | ||
| Women | |||
| MCH beliefs score | |||
| Arm 1 | |||
| Arm 2 | |||
| Arm 3 | |||
| Stigma score | |||
| Arm 1 | |||
| Arm 2 | |||
| Arm 3 | |||
| Gender equitable score | |||
| Arm 1 | |||
| Arm 2 | |||
| Arm 3 | |||
| Men | |||
| MCH beliefs score | |||
| Arm 2 | |||
| Arm 3 | |||
| Stigma score | |||
| Arm 1 | |||
| Arm 2 | |||
| Arm 3 | |||
| Gender equitable score | |||
| Arm 1 | 0.36 (− 0.34, 1.06) | 0.31 | |
| Arm 2 | |||
| Arm 3 | |||
Adjusted for country, age and education
The significance level was defined as p < 0.05
Difference (t-test) in indicator mean score changes pre- vs post-intervention between study arms by gender
| MCH Beliefs Score | HIV Stigma score | Gender-equitable score | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arm 2 vs 1 | Arm 3 vs 1 | Arm 3 vs 2 | Arm 2 vs 1 | Arm 3 vs 1 | Arm 3 vs 2 | Arm 2 vs 1 | Arm 3 vs 1 | Arm 3 vs 2 | |
| Women | Diff = 0.52 | Diff = 1.34 | Diff = 0.82 | Diff = 0.008 | Diff = − 0.29 | Diff = | Diff = 1.32 | Diff = 0.60 | Diff = |
| p = 0.079 | p < 0.0001 | p = 0.006 | p = 0.98 | p = 0.35 | p = 0.34 | p = 0.002 | p = 0.16 | p = 0.099 | |
| Men | Diff = 0.79 | Diff = 2.03 | Diff = 1.23 | Diff = − 0.52 | Diff = − 0.60 | Diff = | Diff = 1.37 | Diff = 0.79 | Diff = |
| p = 0.018 | p < 0.0001 | p = 0.0003 | p = 0.13 | p = 0.083 | p = 0.82 | p = 0.004 | p = 0.11 | p = 0.24 | |
Adjusted for country, age and education
Changes in mean indicator scores by study arm, country and gender
| Study arms | Women | Men | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Difference pre-post intervention (95% CI) | p-value | Difference pre-post intervention (95% CI) | p-value | |
| Zimbabwe | ||||
| MCH beliefs score | ||||
| Study arm 1 | 2.86 (2.25, 3.47) | 2.60 (1.69, 3.51) | ||
| Study arm 2 | 4.16 (3.52, 4.79) | 3.56 (2.71, 4.40) | ||
| Study arm 3 | 4.01 (3.34, 4.68) | 3.78 (2.97, 4.59) | ||
| Stigma score | ||||
| Study arm 1 | − 2.24 (− 2.85, − 1.63) | − 1.44 (− 2.27, − 0.61) | ||
| Study arm 2 | − 1.56 (− 2.18, − 0.94) | − 2.33 (− 3.11, − 1.54) | ||
| Study arm 3 | − 1.38 (− 2.03, − 0.72) | − 0.77 (− 1.64, 0.09) | 0.0803 | |
| GEM score | ||||
| Study arm 1 | 1.28 (0.39, 2.16) | 1.01 (− 0.21, 2.23) | 0.1032 | |
| Study arm 2 | 2.13 (1.23, 3.02) | 1.83 (0.70, 2.95) | ||
| Study arm 3 | 0.29 (− 0.62, 1.21) | 0.5267 | 0.89 (− 0.24, 2.04) | 0.1228 |
| Uganda | ||||
| MCH beliefs score | ||||
| Study arm 1 | − 0.83 (− 1.49, − 0.17) | − 0.54 (− 1.24, 0.16) | 0.1313 | |
| Study arm 2 | − 0.21 (− 0.94, 0.52) | 0.5731 | 0.26 (− 0.51, 1.01) | 0.5099 |
| Study arm 3 | 0.88 (0.17, 1.58) | 2.83 (2.08, 3.58) | ||
| Stigma score | ||||
| Study arm 1 | − 0.37 (− 0.98, 0.25) | 0.2391 | − 0.23 (− 0.82, 0.36) | 0.4385 |
| Study arm 2 | − 1.49 (− 2.21, − 0.77) | − 1.41 (− 2.07, − 0.76) | ||
| Study arm 3 | − 2.49 (− 3.26, − 1.74) | − 2.38 (− 3.08, − 1.67) | ||
| GEM score | ||||
| Study arm 1 | − 1.30 (− 2.10, − 0.51) | − 1.90 (− 2.83, − 0.98) | ||
| Study arm 2 | 2.19 (1.39, 3.00) | 1.01 (0.15, 1.87) | ||
| Study arm 3 | 1.52 (0.70, 2.34) | 1.42 (0.55, 2.29) | ||
| Eswatini | ||||
| MCH beliefs score | ||||
| Study arm 1 | 1.16 (0.46, 1.87) | 1.24 (0.47, 1.99) | ||
| Study arm 2 | 0.59 (− 0.14, 1.33) | 0.1137 | 1.67 (0.91, 2.43) | |
| Study arm 3 | 1.75 (1.05, 2.44) | 1.71 (0.85, 2.58) | ||
| Stigma score | ||||
| Study arm 1 | 0.58 (0.00, 1.18) | − 0.33 (− 0.95, 0.29) | ||
| Study arm 2 | 0.60 (− 0.00, 1.21) | 0.26 (− 0.39, 0.93) | 0.4337 | |
| Study arm 3 | − 0.23 (− 0.78, 0.32) | 0.4158 | − 0.58 (− 1.29, 0.12) | |
| GEM score | ||||
| Study arm 1 | 2.10 (1.24, 2.96) | 1.77 (0.95, 2.59) | ||
| Study arm 2 | 1.31 (0.53, 2.08) | 1.94 (1.07, 2.81) | ||
| Study arm 3 | 1.52 (0.70, 2.34) | 0.59 (− 0.39, 1.59) | 0.2386 | |
Adjusted for age and education
The significance level was defined as p < 0.05