Intimate partner violence and HIV treatment adherence in urban South Africa: Mediating role of perinatal common mental disorders.

Journal: SSM. Mental health

Volume: 2

Issue: 

Year of Publication: 

Affiliated Institutions:  Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, United States. School of Public Health, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, United States. The Institute for Medical Information Processing, Biometry, and Epidemiology, Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Munich, Germany. School of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa. Department of Reproductive Health and Research, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland.

Abstract summary 

Antiretroviral therapy (ART) has potential to eliminate perinatal HIV infections, but adherence to ART in late pregnancy and postpartum is often suboptimal. Intimate partner violence (IPV) may influence non-adherence among perinatal women living with HIV (WWH), but few quantitative studies have examined this over time or explored mechanisms for this association.We used secondary data from a parent trial in Johannesburg comprising WWH from the control arm (63) and WWH ineligible for the trial (133). Trained nurse researchers administered questionnaires at first antenatal visit on past-year psychological, physical, and/or sexual IPV (WHO instrument), socio-demographics (age, food security, education), and perinatal common mental symptoms of depression (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Screener-d); anxiety (HADS-a); post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD; Harvard Trauma Questionnaire). At endline visit 2-4 months postpartum, nurse researchers assessed self-reported ART adherence using a visual analog scale (with ≥95% considered "good"). We fitted structural equation models (SEM) in MPlus to explore direct and indirect effects of IPV on ART adherence.Of 196 perinatal WWH, 53.1% reported IPV exposure at baseline. The majority of participants (85.7%) had good perinatal ART adherence. In adjusted models, IPV at baseline was associated with halved odds of good adherence (aOR=0.51, 95%CI=0.20-0.96). IPV was associated with higher adjusted odds of probable depression (aOR=4.64), anxiety (aOR=2.85), and PTSD (aOR=3.42). In SEM, IPV had a direct (standardized coef=-0.22) and indirect effect (coef=-0.05) on ART via common mental disorders. The total effect of IPV on perinatal adherence was of moderate size (coef= -0.27) and the model had good fit (CFI=0.972; TLI=0.969; RMSEA=0.045; SRMR=0.076).IPV was longitudinally associated with perinatal ART non-adherence in part due to its relationship with mental health symptomology. Addressing IPV within clinical care has potential to improve perinatal mental health, maternal HIV outcomes, and HIV-free infant survival.

Authors & Co-authors:  Hatcher A M AM Turan J M JM Stöckl H H Woollett N N Garcia-Moreno C C Christofides N J NJ

Study Outcome 

Source Link: Visit source

Statistics
Citations :  Asparouhov T., Muthén B. 2018. SRMR in Mplus. Retreived From.http://www.statmodel.com/download/SRMR2. pdf
Authors :  6
Identifiers
Doi : 100112
SSN : 2666-5603
Study Population
Women
Mesh Terms
Other Terms
ART, antiretroviral therapy;Antiretroviral adherence;HIV;HIV, human immonodeficiency virus;IPV, intimate partner violence;Intimate partner violence;PTSD, post-traumatic stress disorder;Perinatal common mental disorders;Structural equation modeling;T0, baseline timepoint;T1, endline timepoint;WWH, women living with HIV
Study Design
Case Control Trial,Cross Sectional Study
Study Approach
Quantitative
Country of Study
South Africa
Publication Country
England