The role of structural factors for preventing HIV risk practices among adolescents in South Africa: A three-wave analysis of caregiving, education, food security, and social protection

Author:

Rudgard William Edward1ORCID,Saminathen Maria Granvik2,Banougnin Boladé Hamed3,Shenderovich Yulia4,Toska Elona2

Affiliation:

1. University of Oxford

2. University of Cape Town Centre for Social Science Research

3. Univeristy of Cape Town Centre for Social Science Research

4. Cardiff Univeristy School of Social Sciences

Abstract

Abstract Background. Structural interventions are endorsed to enhance biomedical and behavioural HIV prevention programmes for adolescents. Aiming to inform future interventions, we evaluated longitudinal associations between six structural factors and five HIV risk practices in a cohort of adolescents in South Africa. Methods. We used three rounds of data between 2014–2018 on 1046 adolescents living with HIV and 483 age-matched community peers in South Africa’s Eastern Cape (Observations = 4402). We used multivariable random effects within-between logistic regression to estimate sex-specific associations between six time-varying structural factors − number of social grants, education enrolment, days with enough food, caregiver supervision, positive caregiving, and adolescent-caregiver communication − and five HIV risk practices − multiple sexual partners, transactional sex, age-disparate sex, condomless sex, and sex on substances. We calculated probability differences, contrasting predicted probabilities at average and maximum values of structural factors associated with multiple risk practices. Findings. The sample mean age was 15.29 (SD: 3.23) years and 58% were female. In females, compared to average, maximum positive caregiving scores were associated with lower probability of transactional sex (-1.06 percentage points [ppts], 95%CI=-1.60; -0.52ppts), and age-disparate sex (-0.73ppts; 95%CI=-1.26; -0.19ppts); maximum caregiver supervision scores were associated with lower probability of multiple sexual partners (-3.11ppts; 95%CI=-3.87; -2.35ppts) transactional sex (-1.07ppts, 95%CI=-1.42; -0.71ppts), age-disparate sex (-0.67ppts; 95%CI=-1.08; -0.25ppts), condomless sex (-3.96ppts; 95%CI=-5.65; -2.26ppts), and sex on substances (-0.93ppts; 95%CI=-1.50; -0.37ppts); and, seven days with enough food was associated with lower probability of multiple sexual partners (-1.18ppts, 95%CI=-2.06; -0.30ppts), and transactional sex (-0.91ppts; 95%CI=-1.41; -0.42ppts). Relative to non-enrolment, education enrolment was associated with lower probability of age-disparate sex (-3.18ppts; 95%CI=-5.35; -1.01ppts), and condomless sex (-11.32ppts; 95%CI=-19.15; -3.49ppts). In males, compared to average, maximum caregiver supervision scores were associated with lower probability of multiple sexual partners (-2.83ppts; 95%CI=-3.66; -2.00ppts), transactional sex (-0.90ppts; 95%CI=-1.20; -0.60ppts), age-disparate sex (-0.46ppts; 95%CI=-0.77; -0.15ppts), and sex on substances (-1.42ppts; 95%CI=-2.06; -0.78ppts). No other structural factors were associated with multiple risk practices. Interpretation. Structural interventions to improve food security and education enrolment among adolescent girls, and positive and supervisory caregiving among adolescent girls and boys are likely to translate into crucial reductions in HIV risk.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference75 articles.

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2. UNAIDS. UNICEF, and WHO. Epidemic & Response, New HIV infections – Young People (15–24), Africa – Eastern and Southern, 2021 [Internet]. AIDSinfo. [cited 2022 Jul 27]. Available from: https://aidsinfo.unaids.org/#.

3. Global Burden of Disease Collaborative Network. GBD Results Tool [Internet]. Seattle US Am. Inst. Health Metr. Eval. IHME. 2019. Available from: http://ghdx.healthdata.org/gbd-results-tool.

4. Adolescent lives matter: preventing HIV in adolescents;Pettifor A;Curr Opin HIV AIDS,2018

5. Interventions to reduce risk for sexually transmitted infections in adolescents: A meta-analysis of trials, 2008–2016;Morales A;PLoS ONE,2018

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