Knowledge and Attitudes on Contraception and Reproductive Health in Women With HIV

Author:

Henricks Anna1ORCID,Singal Samantha1,Hughes Dana2,Kelly Sean2,Castilho Jessica L23,Norwood Jamison2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Vanderbilt University School of Medicine , Nashville, Tennessee , USA

2. Division of Infectious Diseases, Vanderbilt University Medical Center , Nashville, Tennessee , USA

3. Department of Health Policy, Vanderbilt University Medical Center , Nashville, Tennessee , USA

Abstract

Abstract Background For reasons not fully explained to date, contraception usage among women with HIV remains low. The aim of our study was to understand attitudes toward and lifetime use of contraception among women with HIV. Methods We administered an anonymous, community-informed, voluntary survey to cisgender, English-speaking women with HIV (≥18 years of age) at a Southern urban HIV clinic. It included multiple choice and Likert-scale questions on reproductive health. Participants reported contraception use, recollection of provider conversations about contraception, and perceived empowerment and knowledge regarding reproductive health. We used chi-square and Fisher exact tests to compare attitudes and prior conversations about contraception by age (< vs ≥45 years), race (Black vs non-Black), and lifetime contraception use. Results The median age of the 114 participants was 52 years, and 62% of the women identified as Black and 31% as White. Women reported a median of 2 unique family planning methods used throughout life, with oral contraceptive pills being most the common (59%). Only 20% of women reported having ever used long-acting reversible contraception (LARC). Only 56% of women recalled talking with a provider about contraception. Women of non-Black race and those who had used LARC were more likely to remember (72 vs 52%; P = .035; 87 vs 56%; P = .022; respectively). When asked about preferences, 82% of women age <45 years wanted a nondaily method, and 60% felt uncomfortable with device insertion. Conclusions Throughout life, participants reported using a diversity of contraceptives. Only half of women remembered a provider conversation about contraception. Understanding women's preferences regarding contraception should guide counseling.

Funder

Vanderbilt University School of Medicine

Tennessee Center for AIDS Research

Vanderbilt Institute for Clinical and Translational Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference21 articles.

1. Beyond the pap smear: gender-responsive HIV care for women;Meyer;Yale J Biol Med,2016

2. Women and HIV in the United States;Breskin;PLoS One,2017

3. Factors associated with sterilization among HIV-positive US women in an urban outpatient clinic;Raziano;AIDS Care,2017

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