Niragire François, Achia Thomas N O, Lyambabaje Alexandre, Ntaganira Joseph
Department of Applied Statistics, College of Business and Economics, University of Rwanda, Kigali, Rwanda.
School of Public Health, University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
PLoS One. 2015 Mar 26;10(3):e0119944. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0119944. eCollection 2015.
HIV prevalence is rising and has been consistently higher among women in Rwanda whereas a decreasing national HIV prevalence rate in the adult population has stabilised since 2005. Factors explaining the increased vulnerability of women to HIV infection are not currently well understood. A statistical mapping at smaller geographic units and the identification of key HIV risk factors are crucial for pragmatic and more efficient interventions. The data used in this study were extracted from the 2010 Rwanda Demographic and Health Survey data for 6952 women. A full Bayesian geo-additive logistic regression model was fitted to data in order to assess the effect of key risk factors and map district-level spatial effects on the risk of HIV infection. The results showed that women who had STIs, concurrent sexual partners in the 12 months prior to the survey, a sex debut at earlier age than 19 years, were living in a woman-headed or high-economic status household were significantly associated with a higher risk of HIV infection. There was a protective effect of high HIV knowledge and perception. Women occupied in agriculture, and those residing in rural areas were also associated with lower risk of being infected. This study provides district-level maps of the variation of HIV infection among women of child-bearing age in Rwanda. The maps highlight areas where women are at a higher risk of infection; the aspect that proximate and distal factors alone could not uncover. There are distinctive geographic patterns, although statistically insignificant, of the risk of HIV infection suggesting potential effectiveness of district specific interventions. The results also suggest that changes in sexual behaviour can yield significant results in controlling HIV infection in Rwanda.
卢旺达的艾滋病毒流行率呈上升趋势,且女性中的流行率一直较高,而成人总体艾滋病毒流行率自2005年以来虽有所下降,但已趋于稳定。目前对女性艾滋病毒感染易感性增加的原因尚不完全清楚。在较小地理区域进行统计绘图并确定关键的艾滋病毒风险因素,对于务实且更有效的干预措施至关重要。本研究使用的数据取自2010年卢旺达人口与健康调查中6952名女性的数据。为评估关键风险因素的影响并绘制地区层面艾滋病毒感染风险的空间效应图,对数据拟合了一个全贝叶斯地理加性逻辑回归模型。结果显示,患有性传播感染、在调查前12个月内有多个性伴侣、首次性行为年龄早于19岁、生活在女性当家或高经济地位家庭的女性,感染艾滋病毒的风险显著更高。高艾滋病毒知识和认知有保护作用。从事农业的女性以及居住在农村地区的女性感染风险也较低。本研究提供了卢旺达育龄女性艾滋病毒感染情况变化的地区层面地图。这些地图突出显示了女性感染风险较高的地区;这是仅靠近端和远端因素无法揭示的方面。艾滋病毒感染风险存在独特的地理模式,尽管在统计学上不显著,这表明针对特定地区的干预措施可能有效。结果还表明,性行为的改变在卢旺达控制艾滋病毒感染方面可产生显著效果。