Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation, 1140 Ave NW, Suite 200, Washington, D.C, CT, 20036, USA.
Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation, Harare, Zimbabwe.
Reprod Health. 2017 Oct 5;14(1):124. doi: 10.1186/s12978-017-0387-1.
With the introduction of 2016 World Health Organization guidelines recommending universal antiretroviral therapy (ART), there has been increased recognition of the lack of men engaging in HIV testing and treatment. Studies in sub-Saharan Africa indicate there have been challenges engaging men in HIV testing and HIV-positive men into treatment.
This qualitative study explored women's perspective of their male partner's attitudes towards HIV and ART and how it shapes woman's experience with ART. Data were collected through in-depth interviews and focus group discussions with HIV-positive pregnant and postpartum women on Option B+ and health care workers in Malawi and Zimbabwe. In Malawi, 19 in-depth interviews and 12 focus group discussions were conducted from September-December 2013. In Zimbabwe, 15 in-depth interviews and 21 focus-group discussions were conducted from July 2014-March 2014.
The findings highlighted that many men discourage their partners from initiating or adhering to ART. One of the main findings indicated that despite the many advancements in HIV care and ART regimens, there are still many lingering negative beliefs about HIV and ART from the earlier days of the epidemic. In addition to existing theories explaining men's resistance to/absence in HIV testing and treatment as a threat to their masculinity or because of female-focused health facilities, this paper argues that men's aversion to HIV may be a result of old beliefs about HIV and ART which have not been addressed.
Due to lack of accurate and up to date information about HIV and ART, many men discourage their female partners from initiating and adhering to ART. The effect of lingering and outdated beliefs about HIV and ART needs to be addressed through strengthened communication about developments in HIV care and treatment. Universal ART offers a unique opportunity to curb the epidemic, but successful implementation of these new guidelines is dependent on ART initiation and adherence by both women and men. Strengthening men's understanding about HIV and ART will greatly enhance women's ability to initiate and adhere to ART and improve men's health.
随着 2016 年世界卫生组织指南推荐普遍使用抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)的引入,人们越来越认识到男性参与 HIV 检测和治疗的不足。撒哈拉以南非洲的研究表明,在让男性参与 HIV 检测以及让 HIV 阳性男性接受治疗方面一直存在挑战。
这项定性研究探讨了女性对其男性伴侣对 HIV 和 ART 的态度的看法,以及这种态度如何影响女性接受 ART 的体验。数据是通过在马拉维和津巴布韦对接受 Option B+的 HIV 阳性孕妇和产后妇女以及卫生保健工作者进行深入访谈和焦点小组讨论收集的。在马拉维,2013 年 9 月至 12 月进行了 19 次深入访谈和 12 次焦点小组讨论。在津巴布韦,2014 年 7 月至 2014 年 3 月进行了 15 次深入访谈和 21 次焦点小组讨论。
研究结果强调,许多男性不鼓励其伴侣开始或坚持接受 ART。主要研究结果之一表明,尽管在 HIV 护理和 ART 方案方面取得了许多进展,但仍存在许多与艾滋病早期相关的关于 HIV 和 ART 的挥之不去的负面观念。除了现有理论解释男性对 HIV 检测和治疗的抵制/缺乏是对其男子气概的威胁或由于以女性为中心的卫生设施外,本文还认为,男性对 HIV 的厌恶可能是由于 HIV 和 ART 的旧观念尚未得到解决。
由于缺乏关于 HIV 和 ART 的准确和最新信息,许多男性不鼓励其女性伴侣开始并坚持接受 ART。需要通过加强有关 HIV 护理和治疗方面的进展的沟通来解决有关 HIV 和 ART 的挥之不去的过时观念的影响。普遍的 ART 提供了遏制艾滋病流行的独特机会,但成功实施这些新指南取决于女性和男性对 ART 的启动和坚持。加强男性对 HIV 和 ART 的了解将极大地增强女性启动和坚持接受 ART 的能力,并改善男性的健康状况。