Behavioral Medicine Program, Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, One Bowdoin Square, 7th Floor, Boston, MA, 02114, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Arch Sex Behav. 2018 Oct;47(7):1969-1982. doi: 10.1007/s10508-017-1056-8. Epub 2017 Nov 13.
Despite concerted prevention efforts, young South African women remain at the epicenter of the HIV epidemic. Although these women have grown up in a community powerfully affected by HIV, systematic investigation into how this "second generation" of HIV-affected youth navigates HIV risk is lacking. This study qualitatively explored a complex interplay of factors influencing HIV risk among young pregnant women in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. We conducted in-depth interviews with 35 pregnant women (22 HIV-uninfected and 13 HIV-infected) aged 18-21, 18 healthcare providers, and focus groups with 19 community stakeholders. Among the young women, HIV knowledge was high, and many reported taking some action to prevent pregnancy or HIV; however, these efforts were not routinely implemented. Themes related to HIV acquisition risk from all participants were organized using a socioecological framework and revolved around individual and developmental experiences (personal experience with HIV, perceived invincibility), family barriers (lack of adult supervision, pressure to leave school), relational barriers (lack of disclosure and partner communication, "burn out" around attempts to discuss condom use with partners, overdependence on partners), community-level barriers (township environment, lack of structured activities), and social barriers (poverty, HIV-related stigma). Some novel concepts emerged from the data, including an understanding of how overdependence on the romantic relationship may develop. Current HIV prevention efforts, including traditional HIV counseling and testing, condom distribution, and biomedical agents for HIV prevention, are unlikely to be effective without a broader, ecological up-to-date understanding of the evolving, intertwined, and complex constellation of factors that drive HIV risk behavior in this high-risk population.
尽管采取了协调一致的预防措施,南非年轻女性仍然处于艾滋病流行的中心。尽管这些女性在深受艾滋病影响的社区中长大,但系统地调查这一代受艾滋病影响的青年如何应对艾滋病风险的研究还很缺乏。本研究定性探讨了影响南非夸祖鲁-纳塔尔省年轻孕妇艾滋病风险的一系列复杂因素。我们对 35 名 18-21 岁的孕妇(22 名未感染艾滋病毒,13 名感染艾滋病毒)、18 名医疗保健提供者进行了深入访谈,并与 19 名社区利益攸关方进行了焦点小组讨论。在年轻女性中,艾滋病毒知识水平较高,许多人报告采取了一些措施来预防怀孕或感染艾滋病毒;然而,这些努力并没有常规实施。所有参与者的艾滋病感染风险主题都使用社会生态学框架组织起来,围绕个人和发展经验(个人感染艾滋病毒的经历、认为自己不会感染的想法)、家庭障碍(缺乏成人监督、离开学校的压力)、关系障碍(缺乏披露和伴侣沟通、与伴侣讨论使用避孕套的尝试“筋疲力尽”、过度依赖伴侣)、社区障碍(城镇环境、缺乏结构化活动)和社会障碍(贫困、与艾滋病相关的耻辱感)。数据中出现了一些新的概念,包括对过度依赖浪漫关系的理解可能是如何发展的。如果没有对驱动这一高风险人群的艾滋病风险行为的不断演变、相互交织和复杂的因素进行更广泛、更新的生态理解,目前的艾滋病预防工作,包括传统的艾滋病咨询和检测、避孕套分发以及预防艾滋病的生物医学手段,都不太可能有效。