Residential and healthcare mobility during pregnancy among women living with HIV in the UK, 2009–2019

Author:

Dema Emily12ORCID,Peters Helen2,Gilleece Yvonne34ORCID,Thorne Claire2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Global Health University College London London UK

2. Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health University College London London UK

3. Brighton & Sussex Medical School Brighton UK

4. University Hospitals Sussex NHS Foundation Trust Brighton UK

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionThe extent to which individuals living with HIV experience residential and healthcare mobility during pregnancy in the UK is unknown. We aimed to determine a minimum estimate of residential and healthcare mobility during pregnancy in people living with HIV in the UK in 2009–2019 to explore patterns of and factors associated with mobility and to assess whether mobility was associated with specific HIV outcomes.MethodsWe analyzed data from the Integrated Screening Outcomes Surveillance Service to assess pregnancies with HIV in the UK and included livebirths and stillbirths with estimated delivery in 2009–2019. Residential mobility was defined as changing residential postcode between notification and delivery, and healthcare mobility was defined as changing NHS Trust or Strategic Health Authority (SHA) in that same timeframe. We used logistic regression to determine factors associated with residential and healthcare mobility and with detectable delivery viral load.ResultsAmong 10 305 pregnancies, 19.6% experienced residential mobility, 8.1% changed NHS Trust, and 4.5% changed SHA during pregnancy. Mobility was more likely to be experienced by younger women, migrants, and those with new antenatal diagnosis; residential but not healthcare mobility declined over time. In a fully adjusted model, mobility was not associated with having a detectable viral load at delivery. Higher proportions of infants were lost to follow‐up after mobile pregnancies than after non‐mobile pregnancies.ConclusionsThis analysis provides new knowledge on mobility during pregnancy in the context of HIV, but further research is needed to understand its broader impacts and its utility as a marker to help identify families requiring additional follow‐up and support.

Funder

National Institute for Health and Care Research

Publisher

Wiley

Reference16 articles.

1. Public Health England.Integrated Screening Outcomes Surveillance Service (ISOSS) annual HIV report.20212021; published online July 27.https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/infectious‐diseases‐in‐pregnancy‐screening‐isoss‐hiv‐report‐2021/isoss‐hiv‐report‐2021.

2. NHS England.Infectious diseases in pregnancy screening: ISOSS HIV report 2022. 2023; published online June 22.https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/infectious‐diseases‐in‐pregnancy‐screening‐isoss‐hiv‐report‐2022/isoss‐hiv‐report‐2022.

3. EastabrookR PetersH ThorneC.Pregnancy characteristics and outcomes among migrant women living with HIV recently arrived in the UK. International Workshop on HIV Paediatrics.2021; 2021.https://www.ucl.ac.uk/integrated‐screening‐outcomes‐surveillance/sites/integrated_screening_outcomes_surveillance/files/pregnancy_characteristics_among_migrant_women_recently_arrived_in_uk_eastabrook_poster.pdf.

4. Residential mobility in the UK during pregnancy and infancy: Are pregnant women, new mothers and infants ‘unhealthy migrants’?

5. Residential mobility during pregnancy in the north of England

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