Disclosure status and disclosure intentions among HIV positive persons in rural western Kenya, 2011-2012

Type Journal Article - Cogent Medicine
Title Disclosure status and disclosure intentions among HIV positive persons in rural western Kenya, 2011-2012
Author(s)
Volume 4
Issue 1
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2017
Page numbers 1291096
URL https://www.cogentoa.com/article/10.1080/2331205X.2017.1291096.pdf
Abstract
 We examined associations between respondent characteristics and Human
Immunodeficiency Virus (HWe examined associations between respondent characteristics
and Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) “disclosure status and intentions”
of People Living with HIV (PLHIV) at next sexual encounter using multinomial logistic
regression in rural western Kenya, with three outcomes of interest were “having
disclosed”, “not disclosed but intending to disclose” and “not disclosed and not
intending to disclose”. We analyzed data from a sero-behavioral survey in Gem, Siaya
County, 2011–2012 selecting respondents aged ≥15 years in monogamous unions. Of
379 respondents interviewed, 84% had disclosed, 6% had not disclosed but intended
to disclose while 10% had not disclosed and did not intend to disclose. Persons who
had “not disclosed and intended to disclose” did not differ from those who “had
disclosed”. The odds for “not disclosing and not intending to disclose” vs. “having
disclosed” was 5.38 times greater for persons who had ever used condoms relative
to those who had not. Eight percent of the “not disclosed and not intending disclose”
intended to use condoms at next sexual encounter. Couples HTC should promote
condom use, legislation as regards “reasonable time to disclose HIV status” should
be interpreted, and the conflicting roles of the health workers of protecting confidentiality
of PLHIV and concurrently preventing HIV transmission should be clarified.

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