Sexual and Reproductive Health Unit, Papua New Guinea Institute of Medical Research, Goroka, Papua New Guinea.
BMC Public Health. 2012 Jan 22;12:67. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-12-67.
Adult male surgical circumcision (MC) has been shown to reduce HIV acquisition in men and is recommended by the WHO for inclusion in comprehensive national HIV prevention programs in high prevalence settings. Only limited research to date has been conducted in countries experiencing moderate burden epidemics, where the acceptability, operational feasibility and potential epidemiological impact of MC remain unclear.
A multi-method qualitative research study was conducted at four sites in Papua New Guinea (PNG), with 24 focus group discussions and 65 in-depth interviews carried out among 276 men.
The majority of men were in favour of MC being introduced for HIV prevention in PNG and considered improved genital hygiene, enhanced sexual pleasure and culturally appropriateness key factors in the acceptability of a future intervention. A minority of men were against the introduction of MC, primarily due to concerns regarding sexual risk compensation and that the intervention went against prevailing cultural and religious beliefs.
This is one of the first community-based MC acceptability studies conducted in a moderate prevalence setting outside of Africa. Research findings from this study suggest that a future MC program for HIV prevention would be widely accepted by men in PNG.
成年男性外科环切术(MC)已被证明可降低男性感染 HIV 的风险,世界卫生组织建议在高流行地区将其纳入综合国家 HIV 预防规划中。迄今为止,在中流行国家进行的研究非常有限,这些国家的 MC 的可接受性、操作可行性和潜在的流行病学影响仍不清楚。
在巴布亚新几内亚(PNG)的四个地点进行了一项多方法定性研究,在 276 名男性中进行了 24 次焦点小组讨论和 65 次深入访谈。
大多数男性赞成在 PNG 引入 MC 以预防 HIV,他们认为改善生殖器卫生、提高性快感和文化适宜性是未来干预措施可接受性的关键因素。少数男性反对引入 MC,主要是因为担心性风险补偿,以及该干预措施违反了流行的文化和宗教信仰。
这是在非洲以外的中度流行地区进行的首批基于社区的 MC 可接受性研究之一。这项研究的研究结果表明,未来针对 HIV 预防的 MC 方案将在 PNG 得到男性的广泛接受。