Mental health and other clinical and social characteristics of young mothers living with HIV in Zimbabwe: a mixed-methods study.

Journal: AIDS care

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Affiliated Institutions:  Centre for Sexual Health & HIV/AIDS Research Zimbabwe (CeSHHAR), Harare, Zimbabwe. MRC International Statistics and Epidemiology Group, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom. Zvandiri, Harare, Zimbabwe. UNICEF Zimbabwe, Harare, Zimbabwe. Ministry of Health and Child Care, Harare, Zimbabwe.

Abstract summary 

Young women living with HIV (YWLHIV) experience numerous stressors including treatment management and poor parent modelling. We investigated YWLHIV's mental health and other clinical and social characteristics to inform tailored support. YWLHIV (15-24 years old) participating in a peer-support model tailored for young mothers (Young Mentor Mum intervention) completed a self-administered interview and had clinical and psychological assessments in March to April 2019. A subset participated in in-depth interviews and had their partners interviewed. We analysed quantitative and qualitative data using STATA 15 and thematic analysis, respectively. We enrolled 177 YWLHIV. We found high rates of maternal viral suppression (86.9% with viral load <1000 copies/ml). Over half were at risk of common mental disorder (CMD), scoring above the cut-off point (SSQ ≥8, 50.3%) and depression (EPDS ≥12, 55.9%). CMD risk was higher among women who reported intimate partner violence in the past year (64.1% vs 39.4%; adjusted OR 2.48 (1.12, 5.48) for violence 1-2 times and 2.41 (0.99-5.85) for higher frequency;  = .03). HIV status disclosure was limited; only 44.1% had disclosed to their partners. YWLHIV confront challenges which affect their health and that of their children. Youth-focused mental health interventions coupled with couples counselling and violence prevention need to be scaled up.

Authors & Co-authors:  Mupambireyi Zivai Z Simms Victoria V Mavhu Webster W Mutasa Concilia C Matsikire Edward E Ricotta April A Senzanje Beula B Pierotti Chiara C Mushavi Angela A Willis Nicola N Cowan Frances M FM

Study Outcome 

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Citations : 
Authors :  11
Identifiers
Doi : 10.1080/09540121.2025.2473948
SSN : 1360-0451
Study Population
Women,Mothers
Mesh Terms
Other Terms
HIV;SDG 3: good health and well-being;Young women;disclosure;mental health;pregnancy
Study Design
Study Approach
Quantitative,Qualitative
Country of Study
Zimbabwe
Publication Country
England