Vanderbilt Institute for Global Health, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, 2525 West End Ave, Suite 750, Nashville, TN, 37203, USA.
Friends in Global Health, Quelimane, Mozambique.
Glob Health Res Policy. 2023 Mar 15;8(1):7. doi: 10.1186/s41256-023-00292-4.
Postpartum contraceptive uptake reduces short interpregnancy intervals, unintended pregnancies, and their negative sequalae: poor maternal and fetal outcomes. Healthy timing and spacing of pregnancy in people living with HIV (PLHIV) also allows time to achieve viral suppression to reduce parent-to-child HIV transmission. There is scant understanding about how couples-based interventions impact postpartum contraceptive uptake among PLHIV in sub-Saharan Africa.
We interviewed 38 recently pregnant people and 26 of their partners enrolled in the intervention arm of the Homens para Saúde Mais (HoPS+) [Men for Health Plus] trial to assess their perceptions of, attitudes towards, and experiences with contraceptive use. Individuals in the HoPS+ intervention arm received joint-as opposed to individual-HIV-related services during pregnancy and postpartum periods, six counseling and skills sessions, and nine sessions with a peer support couple. Our thematic analysis of the 64 in-depth interviews generated 14 deductive codes and 3 inductive codes across themes within the Information, Motivation, and Behavior Model of health behavior change.
Participants reported accurate and inaccurate information about birth spacing and contraceptive methods. They described personal (health, economic, and religious) and social (gender norms, desired number of children) motivations for deciding whether to use contraceptives-with slightly different motivations among pregnant and non-pregnant partners. Finally, they explained the skills needed to overcome barriers to contraceptive use including how engagement in HoPS+ improved their shared decision-making skills and respect amongst partners-which facilitated postpartum contraceptive uptake. There were also several cases where non-pregnant partners unilaterally made family planning decisions despite disagreement from their partner.
These findings suggest that couples-based interventions during pregnancy and post-partum periods aimed at increasing postpartum contraceptive uptake must center pregnant partners' desires. Specifically, pregnant partners should be allowed to titrate the level of non-pregnant partner involvement in intervention activities to avoid potentially emboldening harmful gender-based intercouple decision-making dynamics.
产后避孕措施的采用可缩短生育间隔时间、减少意外妊娠及其不良后果,如母婴结局不良。艾滋病毒感染者(PLHIV)也需要健康地规划妊娠间隔时间,以便及时实现病毒抑制,减少母婴传播艾滋病毒的风险。目前,我们对基于伴侣的干预措施如何影响撒哈拉以南非洲地区 PLHIV 的产后避孕措施采用情况知之甚少。
我们对参与 Homens para Saúde Mais(HoPS+)[男人健康更重要]试验干预组的 38 名近期怀孕的妇女及其 26 名伴侣进行了访谈,以评估他们对避孕措施的看法、态度和使用经验。HoPS+干预组的个体在怀孕和产后期间接受了联合而非个体的与艾滋病毒相关的服务,共进行了 6 次咨询和技能培训课程,以及 9 次与同伴支持夫妇的课程。我们对 64 次深入访谈的主题分析生成了 14 个演绎代码和 3 个主题内的归纳代码,涵盖健康行为改变的信息、动机和行为模型中的主题。
参与者报告了有关生育间隔和避孕方法的准确和不准确信息。他们描述了个人(健康、经济和宗教)和社会(性别规范、期望孩子数量)决定是否使用避孕措施的动机——怀孕和非怀孕伴侣的动机略有不同。最后,他们解释了克服避孕措施采用障碍所需的技能,包括如何参与 HoPS+ 提高他们的共同决策技能和伴侣之间的尊重——这促进了产后避孕措施的采用。也有一些情况下,非怀孕伴侣单方面做出计划生育决定,尽管与伴侣意见不一致。
这些发现表明,旨在增加产后避孕措施采用率的孕期和产后期间基于伴侣的干预措施必须以怀孕伴侣的愿望为中心。具体而言,应允许怀孕伴侣根据非怀孕伴侣参与干预活动的程度来调整,以避免潜在地加剧有害的夫妻间决策动态。