Facilitators of HTS uptake among children of parents living with HIV in Nigeria

Author:

Achebe Chiagozie Ebuka1ORCID,Tiri Henriatta2,MERIBE CHIDOZIE3,STAFFORD KRISTEN2,BLANCO NATALIA2,OBASA BENJAMIN2,CHARURAT MANHATTAN2,GWAMNA JERRY3,Swaminathan Mahesh3,SCHWITTERS AMEE3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Maryland Baltimore

2. University of Maryland School of Medicine

3. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Abstract

Abstract Background In 2019, 36% of the 150,000 children less than 15 years of age living with HIV in Nigeria knew their status, and were receiving antiretroviral therapy. Literature on HIV-positive parents getting their children tested for HIV is limited. Methods Semi-structured interviews were conducted across six geopolitical zones of Nigeria with 101 eligible people living with HIV who had at least one living biological child <15 years of age at the time of the adult’s diagnosis. Interview questions focused on participants’ perspectives on the facilitators and barriers to uptake of HIV testing services for their biological children. All interview transcripts and researchers’ field notes were analysed using MAXQDA (v.12) (VERBI Software (2016) by theme and content using the framework analysis and analytic induction methodologies for qualitative research. Results Facilitators to HTS for children of PLHIV included: PLHIV’s positive status, PLHIV’s partner’s HIV status, and continuous education by health care workers. Reported barriers included the parent’s perception of the child’s health status, family dynamics, and structural and socio-economic challenges. Conclusion The right combination of interventions including those that encourage care providers to render services in a way that elicits a demand for services from clients is critical for improving uptake of HTS for children of PLHIV.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference24 articles.

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3. UNAIDS. Global AIDS. Update 2018 - Miles to go-closing gaps, breaking barriers, righting injustices. Geneva: Switzerland; 2018 https://www.unaids.org/en/resources/documents/2018/global-aids-update, accessed 6 April 2019.

4. UNAIDS. Action, innovation, and solidarity - Building on momentum to close the gaps and leave no one behind in western and central Africa. Geneva: Switzerland; 2019. Available at: https://www.unaids.org/sites/default/files/media_asset/52152-UNAIDS%20WCA%20progress%20report-EN-web.pdf. Accessed 6 April 2019.

5. Fear of stigma, beliefs, and knowledge about HIV are barriers to early access to HIV testing and disclosure for perinatally infected children and adolescents in rural communities in South Africa;Madiba S;South Afr Family Pract,2017

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