COVID-19 大流行期间中学女生生殖道感染增加:与大流行相关的压力、心理健康和家庭安全有关。

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL Sexual Medicine Pub Date : 2024-06-06 eCollection Date: 2024-06-01 DOI:10.1093/sexmed/qfae045
Supriya D Mehta, Debarghya Nandi, Fredrick Otieno, Garazi Zulaika, Elizabeth Nyothach, Walter Agingu, Runa Bhaumik, Linda Mason, Anna Maria van Eijk, Penelope A Phillips-Howard
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:目的:我们试图了解 COVID-19 大流行是如何影响生殖道感染风险的:我们分析了肯尼亚西部 436 名女中学生的队列数据。2018年4月至2019年12月(COVID-19前)进行了基线和6、12、18个月的研究访问,2020年9月至2022年7月(COVID-19期间)进行了30、36、48个月的研究访问。参与者自行填写了一份有关社会人口统计学和性活动的调查表,并提供了自取的阴道拭子进行细菌性阴道病(BV)检测,在年度访视时还进行了性传播感染(STI)检测。我们假设,考虑到学校关闭对这些因素的影响,与 COVID-19 相关的更大压力将通过心理健康、家庭安全感和性接触来调节风险。COVID-19 相关压力采用标准化量表进行测量,并在最高四分位数处进行二分。混合效应模型量化了 BV 和 STI 随时间的变化情况。纵向中介分析量化了 COVID-19 压力与 BV 增加之间的中介关系:分析结果为 BV 和 STI:BV 和 STI 患病率分别从 COVID-19 前的 12.1% 和 10.7% 增加到 COVID-19 期间的 24.5% 和 18.1%。这相当于在 COVID-19 期间与 COVID-19 之前相比,BV 和 STI 的相对流行率分别增加了 26% (95% CI, 1.00-1.59) 和 36% (95% CI, 0.98-1.88),并对众多社会人口和行为因素进行了调整。较高的 COVID-19 相关压力与抑郁症状和家庭安全感的升高有关,而抑郁症状和家庭安全感的升高分别与较高的交男友可能性有关。在中介分析中,COVID-19 相关压力对 BV 的直接影响很小且不显著,这表明 BV 的增加是由于 COVID-19 大流行期间受到影响的一系列因素造成的:这些结果强调了在未来危机中帮助少女保持生殖健康的因素,如预测和减轻心理健康影响、家庭安全问题以及保持性健康服务:COVID-19大流行对失学少女或生活在不同环境中的少女生殖道健康的影响可能有所不同:在这组青春期女孩中,COVID-19相关学校关闭后,BV和性传播感染增加,而抑郁症状和家庭不安全感是导致性暴露可能性增加的风险介导因素。
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Increased reproductive tract infections among secondary school girls during the COVID-19 pandemic: associations with pandemic-related stress, mental health, and domestic safety.

Background: Kenya, like many countries, shuttered schools during COVID-19, with subsequent increases in poor mental health, sexual activity, and pregnancy.

Aim: We sought to understand how the COVID-19 pandemic may mediate the risk of reproductive tract infections.

Methods: We analyzed data from a cohort of 436 secondary schoolgirls in western Kenya. Baseline and 6-, 12-, and 18-month study visits occurred from April 2018 to December 2019 (pre-COVID-19), and 30-, 36-, and 48-month study visits occurred from September 2020 to July 2022 (COVID-19 period). Participants self-completed a survey for sociodemographics and sexual activity and provided self-collected vaginal swabs for bacterial vaginosis (BV) testing, with sexually transmitted infection (STI) testing at annual visits. We hypothesized that greater COVID-19-related stress would mediate risk via mental health, feeling safe inside the home, and sexual exposure, given the pandemic mitigation-related impacts of school closures on these factors. COVID-19-related stress was measured with a standardized scale and dichotomized at the highest quartile. Mixed effects modeling quantified how BV and STI changed over time. Longitudinal mediation analysis quantified how the relationship between COVID-19 stress and increased BV was mediated.

Outcomes: Analysis outcomes were BV and STI.

Results: BV and STI prevalence increased from 12.1% and 10.7% pre-COVID-19 to 24.5% and 18.1% during COVID-19, respectively. This equated to 26% (95% CI, 1.00-1.59) and 36% (95% CI, 0.98-1.88) higher relative prevalence of BV and STIs in the COVID-19 vs pre-COVID-19 periods, adjusted for numerous sociodemographic and behavioral factors. Higher COVID-19-related stress was associated with elevated depressive symptoms and feeling less safe inside the home, which were each associated with a greater likelihood of having a boyfriend. In mediation analyses, the direct effect of COVID-19-related stress on BV was small and nonsignificant, indicating that the increased BV was due to the constellation of factors that were affected during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Clinical translation: These results highlight factors to help maintain reproductive health for adolescent girls in future crises, such as anticipating and mitigating mental health impacts, domestic safety concerns, and maintaining sexual health services.

Strengths and limitations: Impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on drivers of reproductive tract health among those who did not attend school or who live in different settings may differ.

Conclusions: In this cohort of adolescent girls, BV and STIs increased following COVID-19-related school closures, and risk was mediated by depressive symptoms and feeling less safe in the home, which led to a higher likelihood of sexual exposures.

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来源期刊
Sexual Medicine
Sexual Medicine MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL-
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
103
审稿时长
22 weeks
期刊介绍: Sexual Medicine is an official publication of the International Society for Sexual Medicine, and serves the field as the peer-reviewed, open access journal for rapid dissemination of multidisciplinary clinical and basic research in all areas of global sexual medicine, and particularly acts as a venue for topics of regional or sub-specialty interest. The journal is focused on issues in clinical medicine and epidemiology but also publishes basic science papers with particular relevance to specific populations. Sexual Medicine offers clinicians and researchers a rapid route to publication and the opportunity to publish in a broadly distributed and highly visible global forum. The journal publishes high quality articles from all over the world and actively seeks submissions from countries with expanding sexual medicine communities. Sexual Medicine relies on the same expert panel of editors and reviewers as The Journal of Sexual Medicine and Sexual Medicine Reviews.
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