Perceived HIV Stigma and Associated Factors Among Adult ART Patients in Wolaita Zone, Southern Ethiopia.

IF 1.5 Q4 INFECTIOUS DISEASES HIV AIDS-Research and Palliative Care Pub Date : 2022-11-07 eCollection Date: 2022-01-01 DOI:10.2147/HIV.S372738
Aklilu Alemu, Mengistu Meskele, Tadele Dana Darebo, Tilahun Beyene Handiso, Amene Abebe, Kebreab Paulos
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Abstract

Objective: This study aimed to assess perceived HIV stigma and associated factors among adult ART patients in Wolaita Zone, Southern Ethiopia.

Methods: A facility-based cross-sectional study was conducted among 638 participants selected using a multistage sampling technique from July 10 to September 2020. A 12-item short version of the HIV stigma scale was used to measure HIV-related stigma. Data were collected by the interview method using a pre-tested questionnaire. Binary and multivariable logistic regression analyses were performed to identify the factors associated with the outcome variable. The strength and direction of the association were measured using the adjusted odds ratio (AOR) with a 95% confidence interval (CI). Statistical significance was declared at P-value <0.05.

Results: In this study, 57.8% (95% CI = 54.1%-61.9%) of people under HIV care perceived high stigma and 450 (70.5%) disclosed their HIV status. Widowed marital status (AOR = 2.984; 95% CI = 1.728-5.155), primary education (AOR = 3.36; 95% CI = 2.072-5.42), undisclosed HIV status (AOR = 1.657; 95% CI = 1.121-2.451), poor social support (AOR: 2.05; 95% CI = 1.195-3.433), and being member of an HIV support group (AOR: 0.396; 95% CI = 0.249-0.630) were significantly associated with perceived stigma.

Conclusion: The perceived stigma is high among adult ART patients in the study setting. Widowed marital status, primary education, undisclosed HIV status, membership to the social support network NEP+ and poor social support were predictors of perceived HIV stigma. Thus, ART patients should be given more psychosocial support to minimize their perceived public HIV-related stigma.

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埃塞俄比亚南部Wolaita地区成人ART患者的HIV耻辱感及相关因素
目的:本研究旨在评估埃塞俄比亚南部Wolaita地区成年抗逆转录病毒治疗患者对艾滋病毒的耻辱感及其相关因素。方法:采用多阶段抽样技术,于2020年7月10日至9月对638名参与者进行了基于设施的横断面研究。一份包含12个项目的简短版HIV污名量表被用来测量HIV相关的污名。采用预试问卷访谈法收集数据。进行二元和多变量logistic回归分析以确定与结果变量相关的因素。使用校正优势比(AOR)和95%可信区间(CI)测量相关性的强度和方向。在本研究中,接受HIV护理的人中有57.8% (95% CI = 54.1%-61.9%)感到高度耻辱,450人(70.5%)透露了自己的HIV感染状况。丧偶婚姻状况(AOR = 2.984;95% CI = 1.728-5.155),初等教育(AOR = 3.36;95% CI = 2.072-5.42),未披露HIV状态(AOR = 1.657;95% CI = 1.121-2.451),社会支持差(AOR: 2.05;95% CI = 1.195-3.433),作为艾滋病毒支持小组的成员(AOR: 0.396;95% CI = 0.249-0.630)与感觉耻感显著相关。结论:在研究环境中,成人ART患者的耻辱感较高。丧偶的婚姻状况、初等教育程度、未披露的艾滋病毒状况、社会支持网络NEP+的成员资格和不良的社会支持是感知艾滋病毒耻辱的预测因素。因此,抗逆转录病毒治疗患者应得到更多的社会心理支持,以尽量减少他们所认为的与艾滋病毒有关的公共耻辱。
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CiteScore
3.00
自引率
6.70%
发文量
61
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: About Dove Medical Press Dove Medical Press Ltd is part of Taylor & Francis Group, the Academic Publishing Division of Informa PLC. We specialize in the publication of Open Access peer-reviewed journals across the broad spectrum of science, technology and especially medicine. Dove Medical Press was founded in 2003 with the objective of combining the highest editorial standards with the ''best of breed'' new publishing technologies. We have offices in Manchester and London in the United Kingdom, representatives in Princeton, New Jersey in the United States, and our editorial offices are in Auckland, New Zealand. Dr Scott Fraser is our Medical Director based in the UK. He has been in full time clinical practice for over 20 years as well as having an active research interest.
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