| Literature DB >> 34133231 |
Kenneth Ngure1,2, Susan B Trinidad3, Kristin Beima-Sofie2, John Kinuthia2,4, Daniel Matemo4, Grace Kimemia5, Anne Njoroge2,4, Lillian Achiro6, Jillian Pintye2, Nelly R Mugo2,7, Elizabeth A Bukusi2,6,8, Jared M Baeten2,9,10, Renee Heffron2,9, Grace John-Stewart2,9,10,11, Maureen C Kelley12.
Abstract
Implementation research ethics can be particularly challenging when pregnant women have been excluded from earlier clinical stages of research given greater uncertainty about safety and efficacy in pregnancy. The evaluation of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) during pregnancy offered an opportunity to understand important ethical considerations and social influences shaping women's decisions to participate in the evaluation of PrEP and investigational drugs during pregnancy. We conducted interviews with women (n = 51), focus groups with male partners (five focus group discussions [FGDs]), interviews with health providers (n = 45), four FGDs with pregnant/postpartum adolescents and four FGDs with young women. Data were analyzed using thematic content analysis, including ethical aspects of the data. Our study reveals that women navigate a complex network of social influences, expectations, support, and gender roles, not only with male partners, but also with clinicians, family, and friends when making decisions about PrEP or other drugs that lack complete safety data during pregnancy.Entities:
Keywords: consent; human immunodeficiency virus prevention; partners; preexposure prophylaxis; pregnancy; relational autonomy; research ethics; social influences
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34133231 PMCID: PMC8261769 DOI: 10.1177/15562646211012296
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Empir Res Hum Res Ethics ISSN: 1556-2646 Impact factor: 1.742
ChIP Participant Categories.
| Population | IDI/FGD | Location | Age (years) |
| Partner Demonstration Project |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PrEP exposed, pregnant/postpartum | IDI | Thika, Kisumu | ≥18 | 21 | Yes |
| PrEP exposed, no pregnancy | IDI | Thika, Kisumu | ≥18 | 30 | Yes |
| PrEP unexposed, pregnant/postpartum, AGYW | FGD | Mathare, Ahero | 14–17 | 32 (4 FGDs) | No |
| PrEP unexposed, pregnant/postpartum | FGD | Mathare, Ahero | ≥18 | 36 (4 FGDs) | No |
| Male partners | FGD | Kisumu | ≥18 | 12 (2 FGDs) | Yes |
| Male partners | FGD | Thika | ≥18 | 23 (3 FGDs) | Yes |
| Health providers | KII | Thika, Kisumu | ≥18 | 45 |
Note. ChIP = Choices in Pregnancy; IDI = in-depth interview; FGD = focus group discussion; PrEP = preexposure prophylaxis; KII = key informant interview; AGYW = Adolescent girls and young women.
Topic Guide for Male Partners, Women, and Clinicians on Considerations of Women's Autonomy (Please see Electronic Supplemental material for Detailed Interview Guides).
|
How did you decide to become pregnant while taking PrEP? If it was planned, did you talk about the choice to become pregnant while taking PrEP with anyone before becoming pregnant (partner, friend or relative, healthcare provider)? What about after you became pregnant—did you talk with anyone (partner, friend or relative, health provider) about staying on PrEP during your pregnancy? How do male partners view the involvement of a female partner in research during pregnancy? What kinds of concerns do they have, and how do they view the role of women in decision making? Do men expect women to obtain permission from male partners or not, and what ethical rationale is offered? How do women think about partners’ role in decisions about their own health and health during pregnancy? How do women and healthcare workers navigate social and cultural expectations when evaluating a new intervention for use during pregnancy? What, if anything, is exceptional about HIV in such decisions? Probes included comparisons to decisions involving TB or malaria treatment by comparison. |
Note. PrEP = preexposure prophylaxis; TB = tuberculosis.
Female Participant Demographics.
| Female FGD characteristics | Adolescent | Non-adolescent | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 32 | 17 (16.5–18) | 36 | 25 (22–29.5) |
| Age at first pregnancy | 32 | 16 (15–17) | 36 | 20.5 (19–22.5) |
| Number of pregnancies | 32 | 1 (1–1.5) | 36 | 2 (1–3) |
| Number of children | 32 | 0.5 (0–1) | 36 | 1 (0–2) |
| Current status | 32 | 36 | ||
| Pregnant | 19 (59) | 26 (72) | ||
| Nursing | 13 (41) | 10 (28) | ||
| Marital status | 32 | 36 | ||
| Married (monogamous) | 22 (69) | 24 (94) | ||
| Married (polygamous) | 0 (0) | 1 (3) | ||
| Steady boyfriend | 8 (25) | 0 (0) | ||
| Single | 2 (6) | 1 (3) | ||
| Years in relationship | 24 | 2 (1–2) | 36 | 3 (1–8.5) |
| Employment | 32 | 36 | ||
| Housewife | 12 (38) | 7 (19) | ||
| Salaried | 2 (6) | 9 (25) | ||
| Self-employed | 2 (6) | 16 (44) | ||
| Unemployed | 16 (50) | 4 (11) | ||
| Highest level of education | 32 | 36 | ||
| Primary | 24 (75) | 17 (47) | ||
| Secondary | 7 (22) | 18 (50) | ||
| College | 1 (3) | 1 (3) | ||
| Female IDI characteristics | Pregnant | Nonpregnant on PrEP | ||
| Age | 21 | 26 (19–35) | 30 | 33.5 (23–54) |
| Number of pregnancies | 21 | 1 (0–7) | 30 | 2 (0–5) |
| Number of children | 21 | 0 (0–5) | 30 | 2 (0–6) |
| Marital status (married) | 21 | 18 (86) | 30 | 29 (97) |
| Years in relationship | 21 | 3 (0–13) | 30 | 8.5 (0–36) |
| Earn an income | 15 | 4,000 (100–80,000 | 21 | 3,000 (300–30,000) |
| Years in school | 21 | 10 (2–16) | 30 | 10 (0–16) |
Note. IQR = interquartile range; PrEP = preexposure prophylaxis; IDI = in-depth interview.
Male FGD Participant Demographics.
| Characteristic | Male FGD-pregnant on PrEP | Male FGD nonpregnant on PrEP | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 36.5 (20–53) | 41 (26–65) | ||
| Number of children | 0 (0–5) | 1 (0–5) | ||
| Marital status (married) | 15 (94%) | 11 (100%) | ||
| Years in relationship
| 2.8 (0–25) | 7 (2–15) | ||
| Earn an income | 16 | 6,000 (1,100–30,000) | 11 | 8,000 (2,000–30,000) |
| Years in school | 8 (0–16) | 8 (4–12) | ||
Note. FGD = focus group discussion; PrEP = preexposure prophylaxis; IQR = interquartile range.
Note demographics of eight male partners were missing.
Health Provider Characteristics (N = 45).
| Characteristic | |
|---|---|
| Age | 36 (25–57) |
| Female | 30 (67) |
| Has children | 34 (76) |
| Clinical training | |
| Nurse | 7 (15.5) |
| Nurse counselor | 8 (17.8) |
| Counselor | 5 (11.1) |
| Psychologist | 3 (6.7) |
| Clinical officer/clinician | 8 (17.8) |
| Community health worker | 4 (8.9) |
| Pharmacist | 4 (8.9) |
| Other | 6 (13.3) |
| Years of experience (total) | 9 (1–34) |
| Years working with pregnant women | 8 (1–27) |
Note. IQR = interquartile range.
Figure 1.Social influences on women's decisions to use preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) or investigational drugs during pregnancy in Kenya