Department of Health Care Organization and Policy, School of Public Health, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 1665 University Boulevard, Birmingham, AL 35294, USA.
AIDS Behav. 2013 Sep;17(7):2528-39. doi: 10.1007/s10461-013-0446-8.
The global community has set goals of virtual elimination of new child HIV infections and 50 percent reduction in HIV-related maternal mortality by the year 2015. Although much progress has been made in expanding prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT) services, there are serious challenges to these global goals, given low rates of utilization of PMTCT services in many settings. We reviewed the literature from low-income settings to examine how HIV-related stigma affects utilization of the series of steps that women must complete for successful PMTCT. We found that stigma negatively impacts service uptake and adherence at each step of this "PMTCT cascade". Modeling exercises indicate that these effects are cumulative and therefore significantly affect rates of infant HIV infection. Alongside making clinical services more available, effective, and accessible for pregnant women, there is also a need to integrate stigma-reduction components into PMTCT, maternal, neonatal, and child health services.
全球社会设定了到 2015 年消除新增儿童艾滋病感染病例和将与艾滋病相关的孕产妇死亡率降低 50%的目标。尽管在扩大预防母婴传播(PMTCT)服务方面已经取得了很大进展,但鉴于在许多环境中 PMTCT 服务的利用率很低,这些全球目标仍面临严峻挑战。我们回顾了来自低收入环境的文献,以研究与艾滋病相关的耻辱感如何影响妇女为成功实现 PMTCT 而必须完成的一系列步骤的利用情况。我们发现,耻辱感会对该“PMTCT 级联”的每一步骤的服务接受度和依从性产生负面影响。建模研究表明,这些影响是累积的,因此会显著影响婴儿艾滋病感染率。除了为孕妇提供更方便、有效和可及的临床服务外,还需要将减少耻辱感的部分纳入 PMTCT、孕产妇、新生儿和儿童健康服务中。