Literature DB >> 9128002

Correlates of voluntary human immunodeficiency virus antibody testing reported by postpartum women.

M P Webber1, E E Schoenbaum, K A Bonuck.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: This study examined attitudes, knowledge, and behaviors reported by postpartum women in an AIDS epicenter toward voluntary human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) counseling and testing.
METHODS: From February 1993 to March 1994, a convenience sample of 544 women underwent postpartum interviews at a municipal hospital in the Bronx, New York City. Demographic information and obstetric, sexual, drug use, and HIV testing histories were elicited, and selected variables were abstracted from the medical charts. Univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses were performed.
RESULTS: Seventy-nine percent of women were voluntarily tested for HIV. In the multivariate model, the strongest individual correlate of HIV testing was a history of drug use. Other independent correlates were being age 25 or younger, having only one child, knowing someone who died of AIDS, and having stigma-related concerns about testing. In univariate analysis, women with a drug risk were more than nine times as likely as others to have delivered without receiving any prenatal care during this pregnancy.
CONCLUSIONS: Voluntary counseling and testing programs can succeed in testing a majority of hospitalized childbearing women. However, women at risk of drug use, who more often reported testing, were probably tested outside of prenatal care settings. Efforts to reduce vertical transmission of HIV infection must focus on bringing more women, especially women who use drugs, into prenatal care.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9128002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Med Womens Assoc (1972)        ISSN: 0098-8421


  5 in total

1.  Trends in HIV testing among pregnant women: United States, 1994-1999.

Authors:  A Lansky; J L Jones; R L Frey; M L Lindegren
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2001-08       Impact factor: 9.308

2.  Organizational predictors of prenatal HIV counseling and testing.

Authors:  K A Ethier; R Fox-Tierney; W C Nicholas; K M Salisbury; J R Ickovics
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2000-09       Impact factor: 9.308

3.  Knowledge of treatment to reduce perinatal human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission and likelihood of testing for HIV: results from two surveys of women of childbearing age.

Authors:  J D Ruiz; F Molitor
Journal:  Matern Child Health J       Date:  1998-06

4.  Barriers to breast cancer screening for low-income Mexican and Dominican women in New York City.

Authors:  Samantha Garbers; Dorothy Jones Jessop; Heather Foti; Maria Uribelarrea; Mary Ann Chiasson
Journal:  J Urban Health       Date:  2003-03       Impact factor: 3.671

5.  Voluntary HIV counseling and testing of pregnant women--an assessment of compliance with Michigan public health statutes.

Authors:  Paula Schuman; Theodore B Jones; Suzanne Ohmit; Cynthia Marbury; Marilyn P Laken
Journal:  MedGenMed       Date:  2004-06-16
  5 in total

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