School of Public Health Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
School of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Glob Health Action. 2022 Dec 31;15(1):2100602. doi: 10.1080/16549716.2022.2100602.
The COVID-19 pandemic has interrupted the prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV (PMTCT) programming in South Africa. In 2020, it was estimated that there were 4 million cross-border migrants in South Africa, some of whom are women living with HIV (WLWH), who are highly mobile and located within peripheral and urban areas of Johannesburg. Little is known about the mobility typologies of these women associated with different movement patterns, the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on mobility typologies of women utilising PMTCT services and on how changes to services might have affected adherence.
To qualitatively explore experiences of different mobility typologies of migrant women utilising PMTCT services in a high mobility context of Johannesburg and how belonging to a specific typology might have affected the health care received and their overall experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Qualitative semi-structured interviews with 40 pregnant migrant WLWH were conducted from June 2020-June 2021. Participants were recruited through purposive sampling at a public hospital in Johannesburg. A thematic approach was used to analyse interviews.
Forty interviews were conducted with 22 cross-border and 18 internal migrants. Women in cross-border migration patterns compared to interprovincial and intraregional mobility experienced barriers of documentation, language availability, mistreatment, education and counselling. Due to border closures, they were unable to receive ART interrupting adherence and relied on SMS reminders to adhere to ART during the pandemic. All 40 women struggled to understand the importance of adherence because of the lack of infrastructure to support social distancing protocols and to provide PMTCT education.
COVID-19 amplified existing challenges for cross-border migrant women to utilise PMTCT services. Future pandemic preparedness should be addressed with differentiated service delivery including multi-month dispensing of ARVs, virtual educational care, and language-sensitive information, responsive to the needs of mobile women to alleviate the burden on the healthcare system.
COVID-19 大流行中断了南非的艾滋病毒母婴传播预防 (PMTCT) 规划。据估计,2020 年南非有 400 万跨境移民,其中一些是感染艾滋病毒的妇女(WLWH),她们流动性很高,分布在约翰内斯堡的周边和城市地区。对于这些与不同移动模式相关的女性的移动类型学知之甚少,也不了解 COVID-19 大流行对利用 PMTCT 服务的女性移动类型学的影响,以及服务的变化如何影响她们的坚持。
在约翰内斯堡高流动性背景下,定性探讨利用 PMTCT 服务的移民妇女的不同流动类型学的经验,以及属于特定类型学如何影响她们所获得的医疗保健以及在 COVID-19 大流行期间的整体体验。
2020 年 6 月至 2021 年 6 月,对来自约翰内斯堡一家公立医院的 40 名怀孕的移民 WLWH 进行了半结构化的定性访谈。通过目的抽样招募参与者。使用主题方法对访谈进行分析。
对 22 名跨境移民和 18 名国内移民进行了 40 次访谈。与省际和区域内流动相比,跨境移民模式下的妇女在文件、语言可用性、虐待、教育和咨询方面面临障碍。由于边境关闭,她们无法获得 ART,导致服药中断,在大流行期间只能依靠短信提醒来坚持服用 ART。由于缺乏支持社会隔离协议和提供 PMTCT 教育的基础设施,所有 40 名妇女都难以理解坚持的重要性。
COVID-19 加剧了跨境移民妇女利用 PMTCT 服务的现有挑战。未来的大流行防范应通过差异化服务提供来解决,包括多剂量分发 ARV、虚拟教育护理和对语言敏感的信息,以满足流动妇女的需求,减轻医疗保健系统的负担。