| Literature DB >> 33985450 |
Oladele Vincent Adeniyi1, Charlotte Nwogwugwu2, Anthony Idowu Ajayi3, John Lambert4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Disclosure of HIV serostatus to a sexual partner can facilitate partner's support and testing and better treatment outcomes. Studies examining changes in disclosure rates of serostatus from delivery and postpartum periods are scarce. Our study fills this gap by using a follow-up survey of postpartum women with HIV to examine if disclosure prevalence has improved compared to the proportion recorded at childbirth. We further assessed the reasons for non-disclosure and correlates of serostatus disclosure to sexual partners.Entities:
Keywords: Disclosure; HIV status; Open communication; Relationship status; South Africa
Year: 2021 PMID: 33985450 PMCID: PMC8117658 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-021-10955-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Demographic and clinical characteristics of study participants
| Variables | Unweighted frequency | Unweighted proportions | Weighted frequencies | Weighted proportions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| All | 485 | 100 | 486 | 100 |
| Age | ||||
| 24 years and less | 36 | 7.4 | 112 | 23.0 |
| 25–29 years | 114 | 23.5 | 131 | 27.0 |
| 30–34 years | 144 | 29.7 | 130 | 26.7 |
| 35–39 years | 123 | 25.4 | 86 | 17.7 |
| 40 years and above | 68 | 14.0 | 27 | 5.6 |
| Marital status | ||||
| Single | 359 | 74.0 | 384 | 78.9 |
| Married | 126 | 26.0 | 102 | 21.1 |
| Education level | ||||
| Grade 7 and less | 30 | 6.2 | 21 | 4.3 |
| Grade 8–12 | 421 | 86.8 | 431 | 88.6 |
| Higher education | 34 | 7.0 | 34 | 7.1 |
| Employed in a salary paying job | ||||
| Yes | 157 | 32.4 | 139 | 28.7 |
| No | 328 | 67.6 | 347 | 71.3 |
| Occupation in last 12 months | ||||
| Government employee | 17 | 3.5 | 14 | 2.8 |
| Non-government employee | 114 | 23.5 | 103 | 21.2 |
| Self-employed | 29 | 6.0 | 26 | 5.4 |
| Student | 23 | 4.7 | 44 | 9.1 |
| Unemployed | 302 | 62.3 | 299 | 61.5 |
| Receives government social grant | ||||
| Yes | 453 | 93.6 | 451 | 92.9 |
| No | 31 | 6.4 | 35 | 7.1 |
| Smoked in the past month | ||||
| Yes | 43 | 8.9 | 46 | 9.4 |
| No | 442 | 91.1 | 440 | 90.6 |
| Drank alcohol in the past month | ||||
| Yes | 173 | 35.7 | 307 | 63.2 |
| No | 312 | 64.3 | 179 | 36.8 |
| Knows partner’s serostatus | ||||
| Yes | 319 | 65.8 | 317 | 65.2 |
| No | 166 | 34.2 | 169 | 34.8 |
| Year since HIV diagnosis | ||||
| 1–5 years | 206 | 42.5 | 259 | 53.2 |
| 6–10 years | 163 | 33.6 | 145 | 29.8 |
| 11–17 years | 116 | 23.9 | 83 | 17.0 |
| Complete adherence | ||||
| Yes | 310 | 63.9 | 285 | 58.6 |
| No | 175 | 36.1 | 201 | 41.4 |
Source: Exit interview of the East London Prospective Cohort Study done (2018)
Weighted Pearson Chi-square analysis of factors associated with HIV status disclosure among postpartum women with HIV
| Variables | Disclosed serostatus to partner | Had not disclosed serostatus to partner | |
|---|---|---|---|
| All | 397 (81.8) | 89 (18.2) | |
| Age | |||
| 24 years and less | 84 (75.0) | 28 (25.0) | 0.182 |
| 25–29 years | 113 (86.3) | 18 (13.7) | |
| 30–34 years | 110 (84.6) | 20 (15.4) | |
| 35–39 years | 69 (80.2) | 17 (19.8) | |
| 40 years and above | 22 (78.6) | 6 (21.4) | |
| Marital status | |||
| Single | 303 (78.9) | 81 (21.1) | 0.001 |
| Married | 95 (92.2) | 8 (7.8) | |
| Education level | |||
| Grade 7 and less | 18 (85.7) | 3 (14.3) | 0.531 |
| Grade 8–12 | 350 (81.2) | 81 (18.8) | |
| Higher education | 30 (88.2) | 4 (11.8) | |
| Employed in a salary paying job | |||
| Yes | 107 (77.0) | 32 (23.0) | 0.053 |
| No | 290 (83.8) | 56 (16.2) | |
| Occupation in last 12 months | |||
| Government employee | 9 (64.3) | 5 (35.7) | 0.0116 |
| Non-government employee | 82 (79.6) | 21 (20.4) | |
| Self-employed | 22 (84.6) | 4 (15.4) | |
| Student | 32 (72.7) | 12 (27.3) | |
| Unemployed | 253 (84.6) | 46 (15.4) | |
| Receives government social grant | |||
| Yes | 366 (81.0) | 86 (19.0) | 0.099 |
| No | 31 (91.2) | 3 (8.8) | |
| Smoking in the past month | |||
| Yes | 33 (73.3) | 12 (26.7) | 0.119 |
| No | 364 (82.7) | 76 (17.3) | |
| Drank alcohol in the past month | |||
| Yes | 134 (75.3) | 44 (24.7) | 0.003 |
| No | 263 (85.7) | 44 (14.3) | |
| Knows partner’s serostatus | |||
| Yes | 309 (97.5) | 8 (2.5) | < 0.001 |
| No | 88 (52.1) | 81 (47.9) | |
| Year since HIV diagnosis | |||
| 1–5 years | 208 (80.3) | 51 (19.7) | 0.415 |
| 6–10 years | 118 (81.4) | 27 (18.6) | |
| 11–17 years | 72 (86.7) | 11 (13.3) | |
| Complete adherence | |||
| Yes | 245 (86.0) | 40 (14.0) | 0.004 |
| No | 153 (76.1) | 48 (23.9) | |
Source: Exit interview of the East London Prospective Cohort Study done (2018)
Adjusted and unadjusted logistic regression models showing the correlates of HIV serostatus disclosure to sexual partner
| Variables | Unadjusted Odds ratios | Adjusted Odds ratios |
|---|---|---|
| Marital status | ||
| Married | 3.29 (1.51–7.13)* | 3.10 (1.39–6.91)* |
| Single | 1 | 1 |
| Age | ||
| 18–34 years | 1.14 (0.67–1.95) | 1.66 (0.89–3.11) |
| 35–46 years | 1 | 1 |
| Education level | ||
| Grade 7 and less | 0.89 (0.18–4.34) | 0.52 (0.10–2.78) |
| Grade 8–12 | 0.63 (0.23–1.77) | 0.58 (0.20–1.67) |
| Higher education | 1 | 1 |
| Employed in a salary paying job | ||
| Yes | 0.64 (0.40–1.05) | 0.67 (0.40–1.12) |
| No | 1 | 1 |
| Drank alcohol in the past year | ||
| Yes | 0.51 (0.32–0.81)* | 0.61 (0.37–0.99)* |
| No | 1 | |
| Year since HIV diagnosis | ||
| 1–5 years | 0.60 (0.29–1.22) | 0.62 (0.28–1.40) |
| 6–10 years | 0.65 (0.30–1.39) | 0.65 (0.29–1.48) |
| 11–17 years | 1 | 1 |
| Complete adherence | ||
| Yes | 0.52 (0.33–0.83)* | 0.59 (0.36–0.96)* |
| No | 1 | 1 |
Source: Exit interview of the East London Prospective Cohort Study done (2018)
*p-value < 0.05
Reasons for non-disclosure of HIV serostatus
| Reasons for not disclosing serostatus | Frequency | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| Fear of rejection and violent reaction | 14 | 16.5 |
| Broke up with him | 10 | 11.8 |
| Not ready to tell him | 55 | 64.7 |
| Not that close to him to discuss such topic | 6 | 7.8 |
Source: Exit interview of the East London Prospective Cohort Study done (2018)