Using a programmatic mapping approach to plan for HIV prevention and harm reduction interventions for people who inject drugs in three South African cities.

Journal: Harm reduction journal

Volume: 14

Issue: 1

Year of Publication: 2018

Affiliated Institutions:  TB/HIV Care Association, Cape Town, South Africa. andrew.scheibe@gmail.com. TB/HIV Care Association, Cape Town, South Africa. OUT LGBT Wellbeing, Pretoria, South Africa. United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Pretoria, South Africa.

Abstract summary 

Stigma, criminalisation and a lack of data on drug use contribute to the "invisibility" of people who inject drugs (PWID) and make HIV prevention and treatment service delivery challenging. We aimed to confirm locations where PWID congregate in Cape Town, eThekwini and Tshwane (South Africa) and to estimate PWID population sizes within selected electoral wards in these areas to inform South Africa's first multi-site HIV prevention project for PWID.Field workers (including PWID peers) interviewed community informants to identify suspected injecting locations in selected electoral wards in each city and then visited these locations and interviewed PWID. Interviews were used to gather information about the accessibility of sterile injecting equipment, location coordinates and movement patterns. We used the Delphi method to obtain final population size estimates for the mapped wards based on estimates from wisdom of the crowd methods, the literature and programmatic data.Between January and April 2015, we mapped 45 wards. Tshwane teams interviewed 39 PWID in 12 wards, resulting in an estimated number of accessible PWID ranging from 568 to 1431. In eThekwini, teams interviewed 40 PWID in 15 wards with an estimated number of accessible PWID ranging from 184 to 350. The Cape Town team interviewed 61 PWID in 18 wards with an estimated number of accessible PWID ranging between 398 and 503. Sterile needles were only available at one location. Almost all needles were bought from pharmacies. Between 80 and 86% of PWID frequented more than one location per day. PWID who reported movement visited a median of three locations a day.Programmatic mapping led by PWID peers can be used effectively to identify and reach PWID and build relationships where access to HIV prevention commodities for PWID is limited. PWID reported limited access to sterile injecting equipment, highlighting an important HIV prevention need. Programmatic mapping data show that outreach programmes should be flexible and account for the mobile nature of PWID populations. The PWID population size estimates can be used to develop service delivery targets and as baseline measures.

Authors & Co-authors:  Scheibe Andrew A Shelly Shaun S Lambert Andrew A Schneider Andrea A Basson Rudolf R Medeiros Nelson N Padayachee Kalvanya K Savva Helen H Hausler Harry H

Study Outcome 

Source Link: Visit source

Statistics
Citations :  National Department of Health, KwaZulu Natal Provincial Government, Central Drug Authority, UNODC, CDC, TB HIV Care Association et al. After 30 years the time for dealing with injecting drug use has finally come. Report from the Drug Use and HIV Preconference. Durban: National Department of Health, KwaZulu Natal Provincial Government, Central Drug Authority, UNODC, CDC, TB HIV Care Association; 2015.
Authors :  9
Identifiers
Doi : 35
SSN : 1477-7517
Study Population
Male,Female
Mesh Terms
Adult
Other Terms
Formative assessment;HIV;Harm reduction;People who inject drugs;Population size estimation;Programmatic mapping;South Africa
Study Design
Cross Sectional Study
Study Approach
Country of Study
South Africa
Publication Country
England