
IPV triples HIV risk, hampers viral suppression among women in sub-Saharan Africa. Addressing IPV is crucial for HIV epidemic control.
Salome Kuchukhidze, M.P.H., from the School of Population and Global Health at McGill University in Montreal, and colleagues examined the effects of IPV on recent sexually contacted infection and women’s engagement in the HIV care cascade in sub-Saharan Africa. The analysis included survey responses from 280,259 ever-partnered women (aged 15 to 64 years in 30 countries).
The researchers found that 21.2 percent of women had experienced physical or sexual IPV in the past year. The adjusted prevalence ratio (PR) for recent HIV infection among women who had experienced past-year physical or sexual IPV was 3.22 (95 percent confidence interval, 1.51 to 6.85; 19,179 women from six studies).
There was minimal effect observed for past-year physical or sexual IPV on self-reported testing in the past year (adjusted PR, 0.99; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.98 to 1.01; 274,506 women).
Similarly, findings were inconclusive for the association of antiretroviral therapy uptake with past-year IPV among women living with this virus (adjusted PR, 0.96; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.90 to 1.02; 5,629 women).
However, women living with HIV who had experienced physical or sexual IPV in the past year were less likely to achieve viral load suppression versus women who had not experienced past-year IPV (adjusted PR, 0.91; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.84 to 0.98; 5,627 women).
“Preventing IPV is inherently imperative, but eliminating IPV could contribute to ending the HIV epidemic,” the authors write.
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