Recent HIV prevalence trends among pregnant women and all women in sub-Saharan Africa: implications for HIV estimates

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dc.date.accessioned 2014-12-22 en
dc.date.accessioned 2022-08-17T16:46:34Z
dc.date.available 2022-08-17T16:46:34Z
dc.date.issued 2015-08-25 en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11910/2180
dc.description.abstract National population-wide HIV prevalence and incidence trends in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) are indirectly estimated using HIV prevalence measured among pregnant women attending antenatal clinics (ANC), among other data. We evaluated whether recent HIV prevalence trends among pregnant women are representative of general population trends. Serial population-based household surveys in 13 SSA countries. We calculated HIV prevalence trends among all women aged 15-49 years and currently pregnant women between surveys conducted from 2003 to 2008 (period 1) and 2009 to 2012 (period 2). Log-binomial regression was used to test for a difference in prevalence trend between the two groups. Prevalence among pregnant women was age-standardized to represent the age distribution of all women. Pooling data for all countries, HIV prevalence declined among pregnant women from 6.5 [95% confidence interval (CI) 5.3-7.9%] to 5.3% between periods 1 and 2, whereas it remained unchanged among all women at 8.4% (95% CI 8.0-8.9%) in period 1 and 8.3% (95% CI 7.9-8.8%) in period 2. Prevalence declined by 18% more in pregnant women than nonpregnant women. Estimates were similar in Western, Eastern, and Southern regions of SSA; none were statistically significant (P>0.05). HIV prevalence decreased significantly among women aged 15-24 years while increasing significantly among women 35-49 years, who represented 29% of women but only 15% of pregnant women. Age-standardization of prevalence in pregnant women did not reconcile the discrepant trends because at older ages prevalence was lower among pregnant women than nonpregnant women. As HIV prevalence in SSA has shifted toward older, less-fertile women, HIV prevalence among pregnant women has declined more rapidly than prevalence in women overall. Interpretation of ANC prevalence data to inform national HIV estimates should account for both age-specific fertility patterns and HIV-related sub-fertility. en
dc.format.medium Print en
dc.subject WOMEN en
dc.subject SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA en
dc.subject FERTILITY en
dc.subject ANTENATAL CARE en
dc.subject HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS en
dc.subject PREGNANCY en
dc.subject HIV/AIDS en
dc.title Recent HIV prevalence trends among pregnant women and all women in sub-Saharan Africa: implications for HIV estimates en
dc.type Journal Article en
dc.description.version Y en
dc.ProjectNumber N/A en
dc.Volume 28(S4) en
dc.BudgetYear 2014/15 en
dc.ResearchGroup HIV/AIDS, STIs and TB en
dc.SourceTitle AIDS en
dc.ArchiveNumber 8433 en
dc.URL http://ktree.hsrc.ac.za/doc_read_all.php?docid=15530 en
dc.PageNumber S507-S514 en
dc.outputnumber 7169 en
dc.bibliographictitle Eaton, J.W., Rehle, T.M., Jooste, S., Nkambule, R., Kim, A.A., Mahy, M. & Hallett, T.B. (2014) Recent HIV prevalence trends among pregnant women and all women in sub-Saharan Africa: implications for HIV estimates. AIDS. 28(S4):S507-S514. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11910/2180 en
dc.publicationyear 2014 en
dc.contributor.author1 Eaton, J.W. en
dc.contributor.author2 Rehle, T.M. en
dc.contributor.author3 Jooste, S. en
dc.contributor.author4 Nkambule, R. en
dc.contributor.author5 Kim, A.A. en
dc.contributor.author6 Mahy, M. en
dc.contributor.author7 Hallett, T.B. en


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