Department of Community Medicine and Health Care, University of Connecticut School of Medicine, Farmington, CT, USA.
Glob Public Health. 2010;5(6):649-62. doi: 10.1080/17441690903367141.
An important step in preventing mother-to-child transmission is testing pregnant women for HIV. Health literacy measures, such as HIV knowledge and risk perception, may determine which women are tested in prenatal clinics where routine opt-out testing is not available. A survey was conducted in Guayaquil, Ecuador in 2006 (n=485), where approximately 0.7% of HIV tests in prenatal clinics were positive. Pregnant women over the age of 18 were invited to complete the survey in the waiting rooms at four city hospitals. There were 67.2% of women reported being tested previously for HIV. The most notable finding was that women who perceived a risk were 1.74 times more likely to request testing (p=0.021), but a woman's risk perception was not related to established risk factors. In addition, a physician's recommendation would result in the testing of nearly all women (94.3%). This data suggest that interventions in prenatal care clinics should incorporate educational strategies to increase accurate perception of personal risk. These efforts must occur in conjunction with increasing the access to HIV tests to achieve the goal of universal prenatal testing.
预防母婴传播的一个重要步骤是对孕妇进行艾滋病毒检测。健康素养措施,如艾滋病毒知识和风险认知,可能决定了在没有常规选择退出检测的情况下,哪些妇女会在产前诊所接受检测。2006 年在厄瓜多尔瓜亚基尔进行了一项调查(n=485),其中约 0.7%的产前诊所艾滋病毒检测呈阳性。邀请 18 岁以上的孕妇在四家市立医院的候诊室填写调查。有 67.2%的女性报告说之前曾接受过艾滋病毒检测。最值得注意的发现是,认为有风险的女性要求检测的可能性是 1.74 倍(p=0.021),但女性的风险认知与既定的风险因素无关。此外,医生的建议几乎会导致所有女性(94.3%)接受检测。这些数据表明,产前保健诊所的干预措施应纳入教育策略,以提高对个人风险的准确认知。这些努力必须与增加艾滋病毒检测的机会相结合,以实现普遍进行产前检测的目标。