Beyond HIV-serodiscordance: Partnership communication dynamics that affect engagement in safer conception care.

We explored acceptability and feasibility of safer conception methods among HIV-affected couples in Uganda.We recruited HIV-positive men and women on antiretroviral therapy (ART) ('index') from the Uganda Antiretroviral Rural Treatment Outcomes cohort who reported an HIV-negative or unknow...

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Main Authors: Lynn T Matthews, Bridget F Burns, Francis Bajunirwe, Jerome Kabakyenga, Mwebesa Bwana, Courtney Ng, Jasmine Kastner, Annet Kembabazi, Naomi Sanyu, Adrine Kusasira, Jessica E Haberer, David R Bangsberg, Angela Kaida
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5589112?pdf=render
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author Lynn T Matthews
Bridget F Burns
Francis Bajunirwe
Jerome Kabakyenga
Mwebesa Bwana
Courtney Ng
Jasmine Kastner
Annet Kembabazi
Naomi Sanyu
Adrine Kusasira
Jessica E Haberer
David R Bangsberg
Angela Kaida
author_facet Lynn T Matthews
Bridget F Burns
Francis Bajunirwe
Jerome Kabakyenga
Mwebesa Bwana
Courtney Ng
Jasmine Kastner
Annet Kembabazi
Naomi Sanyu
Adrine Kusasira
Jessica E Haberer
David R Bangsberg
Angela Kaida
author_sort Lynn T Matthews
collection DOAJ
description We explored acceptability and feasibility of safer conception methods among HIV-affected couples in Uganda.We recruited HIV-positive men and women on antiretroviral therapy (ART) ('index') from the Uganda Antiretroviral Rural Treatment Outcomes cohort who reported an HIV-negative or unknown-serostatus partner ('partner'), HIV-serostatus disclosure to partner, and personal or partner desire for a child within two years. We conducted in-depth interviews with 40 individuals from 20 couples, using a narrative approach with tailored images to assess acceptability of five safer conception strategies: ART for the infected partner, pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for the uninfected partner, condomless sex timed to peak fertility, manual insemination, and male circumcision. Translated and transcribed data were analyzed using thematic analysis.11/20 index participants were women, median age of 32.5 years, median of 2 living children, and 80% had HIV-RNA <400 copies/mL. Awareness of HIV prevention strategies beyond condoms and abstinence was limited and precluded opportunity to explore or validly assess acceptability or feasibility of safer conception methods. Four key partnership communication challenges emerged as primary barriers to engagement in safer conception care, including: (1) HIV-serostatus disclosure: Although disclosure was an inclusion criterion, partners commonly reported not knowing the index partner's HIV status. Similarly, the partner's HIV-serostatus, as reported by the index, was frequently inaccurate. (2) Childbearing intention: Many couples had divergent childbearing intentions and made incorrect assumptions about their partner's desires. (3) HIV risk perception: Participants had disparate understandings of HIV transmission and disagreed on the acceptable level of HIV risk to meet reproductive goals. (4) Partnership commitment: Participants revealed significant discord in perceptions of partnership commitment. All four types of partnership miscommunication introduced constraints to autonomous reproductive decision-making, particularly for women. Such miscommunication was common, as only 2 of 20 partnerships in our sample were mutually-disclosed with agreement across all four communication themes.Enthusiasm for safer conception programming is growing. Our findings highlight the importance of addressing gendered partnership communication regarding HIV disclosure, reproductive goals, acceptable HIV risk, and commitment, alongside technical safer conception advice. Failing to consider partnership dynamics across these domains risks limiting reach, uptake, adherence to, and retention in safer conception programming.
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spelling doaj.art-b144325c334c491eb2a71746fdd63a5d2022-12-21T19:04:48ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01129e018313110.1371/journal.pone.0183131Beyond HIV-serodiscordance: Partnership communication dynamics that affect engagement in safer conception care.Lynn T MatthewsBridget F BurnsFrancis BajunirweJerome KabakyengaMwebesa BwanaCourtney NgJasmine KastnerAnnet KembabaziNaomi SanyuAdrine KusasiraJessica E HabererDavid R BangsbergAngela KaidaWe explored acceptability and feasibility of safer conception methods among HIV-affected couples in Uganda.We recruited HIV-positive men and women on antiretroviral therapy (ART) ('index') from the Uganda Antiretroviral Rural Treatment Outcomes cohort who reported an HIV-negative or unknown-serostatus partner ('partner'), HIV-serostatus disclosure to partner, and personal or partner desire for a child within two years. We conducted in-depth interviews with 40 individuals from 20 couples, using a narrative approach with tailored images to assess acceptability of five safer conception strategies: ART for the infected partner, pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for the uninfected partner, condomless sex timed to peak fertility, manual insemination, and male circumcision. Translated and transcribed data were analyzed using thematic analysis.11/20 index participants were women, median age of 32.5 years, median of 2 living children, and 80% had HIV-RNA <400 copies/mL. Awareness of HIV prevention strategies beyond condoms and abstinence was limited and precluded opportunity to explore or validly assess acceptability or feasibility of safer conception methods. Four key partnership communication challenges emerged as primary barriers to engagement in safer conception care, including: (1) HIV-serostatus disclosure: Although disclosure was an inclusion criterion, partners commonly reported not knowing the index partner's HIV status. Similarly, the partner's HIV-serostatus, as reported by the index, was frequently inaccurate. (2) Childbearing intention: Many couples had divergent childbearing intentions and made incorrect assumptions about their partner's desires. (3) HIV risk perception: Participants had disparate understandings of HIV transmission and disagreed on the acceptable level of HIV risk to meet reproductive goals. (4) Partnership commitment: Participants revealed significant discord in perceptions of partnership commitment. All four types of partnership miscommunication introduced constraints to autonomous reproductive decision-making, particularly for women. Such miscommunication was common, as only 2 of 20 partnerships in our sample were mutually-disclosed with agreement across all four communication themes.Enthusiasm for safer conception programming is growing. Our findings highlight the importance of addressing gendered partnership communication regarding HIV disclosure, reproductive goals, acceptable HIV risk, and commitment, alongside technical safer conception advice. Failing to consider partnership dynamics across these domains risks limiting reach, uptake, adherence to, and retention in safer conception programming.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5589112?pdf=render
spellingShingle Lynn T Matthews
Bridget F Burns
Francis Bajunirwe
Jerome Kabakyenga
Mwebesa Bwana
Courtney Ng
Jasmine Kastner
Annet Kembabazi
Naomi Sanyu
Adrine Kusasira
Jessica E Haberer
David R Bangsberg
Angela Kaida
Beyond HIV-serodiscordance: Partnership communication dynamics that affect engagement in safer conception care.
PLoS ONE
title Beyond HIV-serodiscordance: Partnership communication dynamics that affect engagement in safer conception care.
title_full Beyond HIV-serodiscordance: Partnership communication dynamics that affect engagement in safer conception care.
title_fullStr Beyond HIV-serodiscordance: Partnership communication dynamics that affect engagement in safer conception care.
title_full_unstemmed Beyond HIV-serodiscordance: Partnership communication dynamics that affect engagement in safer conception care.
title_short Beyond HIV-serodiscordance: Partnership communication dynamics that affect engagement in safer conception care.
title_sort beyond hiv serodiscordance partnership communication dynamics that affect engagement in safer conception care
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5589112?pdf=render
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