Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Enda Sante, Dakar.
AIDS. 2020 Sep 1;34 Suppl 1(Suppl 1):S63-S71. doi: 10.1097/QAD.0000000000002641.
The current study aims to assess longitudinal differences in stigma and HIV outcomes among key populations at risk for and living with HIV.
Key populations enrolled into two parallel prospective cohorts; one for female sex workers and one for sexual and gender minorities (SGMs). Participants were recruited from three urban areas in Senegal; were followed for 24 months; and had the option to participate in an integrated stigma mitigation intervention.
Participants included individuals both at risk for and living with HIV. Sociobehavioral questionnaires and biological HIV testing were administered every 3-4 months. Longitudinal analyses used nonparametric Chi-squared test for trends and multivariable logistic regression with generalized estimating equations.
183 SGM and 192 sex workers were enrolled. Among SGM participants, 39.9% were living with HIV at baseline and incidence over 24 months was 3.21/100 person-years. Among sex workers, 36.6% were living with HIV at baseline and incidence was 1.32/100 person-years. Among SGM, perceived healthcare stigma (P < 0.001), anticipated healthcare stigma (P < 0.001), and perceived friend stigma (P = 0.047) reduced, but differed by HIV status for perceived [adjusted odds ratio (aOR): 3.51; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.75, 7.06] and anticipated healthcare stigmas (aOR: 2.85; 95% CI: 1.06-7.67). Among sex workers perceived healthcare stigma (P = 0.043) and perceived friend stigma (P = 0.006) reduced. Viral suppression increased among SGM (P = 0.028) and was associated with perceived (aOR: 2.87; 95% CI: 1.39-5.55) and enacted healthcare stigma (aOR: 0.42; 95% CI: 0.18-0.99).
Overall, there were decreases in stigmas observed but clear differences in stigma patterns by HIV status. These data highlight the need to consider specific strategies to address multiple intersecting stigmas as a means of improving HIV-related prevention and treatment outcomes among key populations with diverse identities.
本研究旨在评估重点艾滋病高危和感染者人群中,随着时间推移,耻辱感和艾滋病毒相关结局的纵向差异。
重点人群纳入了两个平行的前瞻性队列;一个队列为女性性工作者,另一个队列为性少数群体(SGM)。参与者招募自塞内加尔三个城市地区,随访 24 个月,并可选择参加综合耻辱感减轻干预。
参与者包括艾滋病毒高危和感染者。每 3-4 个月进行一次社会行为问卷和生物 HIV 检测。使用非参数卡方趋势检验和广义估计方程进行多变量逻辑回归分析。
共纳入 183 名 SGM 和 192 名性工作者。SGM 参与者中,39.9%基线时患有 HIV,24 个月时的发病率为 3.21/100人年。性工作者中,36.6%基线时患有 HIV,发病率为 1.32/100 人年。在 SGM 中,感知医疗保健耻辱感(P<0.001)、预期医疗保健耻辱感(P<0.001)和感知朋友耻辱感(P=0.047)降低,但因 HIV 状况不同而有所差异,包括感知(调整后的优势比[aOR]:3.51;95%置信区间[CI]:1.75,7.06)和预期医疗保健耻辱感(aOR:2.85;95% CI:1.06-7.67)。性工作者中,感知医疗保健耻辱感(P=0.043)和感知朋友耻辱感(P=0.006)降低。SGM 中的病毒抑制率增加(P=0.028),与感知(aOR:2.87;95% CI:1.39-5.55)和实施医疗保健耻辱感(aOR:0.42;95% CI:0.18-0.99)相关。
总体而言,观察到耻辱感有所下降,但 HIV 状况存在明显差异。这些数据突出表明,需要考虑具体策略,以解决多种交叉耻辱感,作为改善具有不同身份的重点人群艾滋病毒相关预防和治疗结果的一种手段。