TY - JOUR
PY - 2018//
TI - Multi-type violence exposures and adolescent antiretroviral non-adherence in South Africa
JO - AIDS
A1 - Meinck, Franziska
A1 - Cluver, Lucie
A1 - Sherr, Lorraine
A1 - Hodes, Rebecca J.
A1 - Orkin, F. Mark
A1 - Toska, Elona
SP - 975
EP - 983
VL - 32
IS - 8
N2 - OBJECTIVE(S): HIV-positive adolescents have low ART-adherence, with consequent increased risks of mortality, morbidity and viral resistance. Despite high rates of violence against children in the Africa region, no known studies have tested impacts on HIV-positive adolescents. We examine associations of ART-adherence with adolescent violence victimisation by caregivers, teachers, peers, community members, and healthcare providers. DESIGN AND METHODS: HIV-positive adolescents were interviewed (n = 1060), and clinic biomarker data collected. We sampled all 10-19 year olds ever ART-initiated within 53 clinics in 180 South African communities (90.1% reached). Analyses examined associations between non-adherence and 9 violence types using sequential multivariate logistic regressions. Interactive and additive effects were tested with regression and marginal effects.
RESULTS: Past-week self-reported ART non-adherence was 36%. Non-adherence correlated strongly with virologic failure (OR 2.3, CI 1.4-3.8) and symptomatic pulmonary tuberculosis (OR 1.49, CI 1.18·2.05). Four violence types were independently associated with non-adherence: physical abuse by caregivers (OR 1.5, CI 1.1-2.1); witnessing domestic violence (OR 1.8, CI 1.22-2.66); teacher violence (OR 1.51, CI 1.16-1.96,) and verbal victimisation by healthcare staff (OR 2.15, CI 1.59-2.93). Past-week non-adherence rose from 25% with no violence, to 73.5% with four types of violence exposure.
CONCLUSIONS: Violence exposures at home, school and clinic are major and cumulating risks for adolescent antiretroviral non-adherence. Prevention, mitigation, and protection services may be essential for the health and survival of HIV-positive adolescents.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 0269-9370 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/QAD.0000000000001795 ID - ref1 ER -