Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Fiorentino Marion, Sow A., Sagaon Teyssier Luis, Mora M., Mengue M. T., Vidal Laurent, Kuaban C., March Laura, Laurent Christian, Spire B., Boyer S., EVOLCam Study Group. (2021). Intimate partner violence by men living with HIV in Cameroon : prevalence, associated factors and implications for HIV transmission risk (ANRS-12288 EVOLCAM). PLoS One, 16 (2), e0246192 [19 p.]. ISSN 1932-6203.

Titre du document
Intimate partner violence by men living with HIV in Cameroon : prevalence, associated factors and implications for HIV transmission risk (ANRS-12288 EVOLCAM)
Année de publication
2021
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000620625100042
Auteurs
Fiorentino Marion, Sow A., Sagaon Teyssier Luis, Mora M., Mengue M. T., Vidal Laurent, Kuaban C., March Laura, Laurent Christian, Spire B., Boyer S., EVOLCam Study Group
Source
PLoS One, 2021, 16 (2), e0246192 [19 p.] ISSN 1932-6203
Objectives Intimate partner violence (IPV) against women is frequent in Central Africa and may be a HIV infection risk factor. More data on HIV-positive men (MLHIV) committing IPV are needed to develop perpetrator-focused IPV and HIV prevention interventions. We investigated the relationship between IPV and HIV transmission risk and IPV-associated factors. Methods We used data from the cross-sectional survey EVOLCam which was conducted in Cameroonian outpatient HIV structures in 2014. The study population comprised MLHIV declaring at least one sexual partner in the previous year. Using principal component analysis, we built three variables measuring, respectively, self-reported MLHIV-perpetrated psychological and physical IPV (PPV), severe physical IPV (SPV), and sexual IPV (SV). Ordinal logistic regressions helped investigate: i) the relationship between HIV transmission risk (defined as unstable aviremia and inconsistent condom use) and IPV variables, ii) factors associated with each IPV variable. Results PPV, SPV and SV were self-reported by 28, 15 and 11% of the 406 study participants, respectively. IPV perpetrators had a significantly higher risk of transmitting HIV than non-IPV perpetrators. Factors independently associated with IPV variables were: i) socio-demographic, economic and dyadic factors, including younger age (PPV and SPV), lower income (PPV), not being the household head (SPV and SV), living with a main partner (SPV), and having a younger main partner (SPV); ii) sexual behaviors, including >= 2 partners in the previous year (PPV and SPV), lifetime sex with another man (SPV), inconsistent condom use (SV), and >20 partners during lifetime (SV); iii) HIV-related stigma (PPV and SV). Conclusion IPV perpetrators had a higher risk of transmitting HIV and having lifetime and recent risky sexual behaviors. Perpetrating IPV was more frequent in those with socioeconomic vulnerability and self-perceived HIV-related stigma. These findings highlight the need for interventions to prevent IPV by MLHIV and related HIV transmission to their(s) partner(s).
Plan de classement
Entomologie médicale / Parasitologie / Virologie [052] ; Santé : aspects socioculturels, économiques et politiques [056]
Description Géographique
CAMEROUN
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010081066]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010081066
Contact