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Perspectives on male partner notification and treatment for syphilis among antenatal women and their partners in Kampala and Wakiso districts, Uganda

BACKGROUND: Syphilis screening can be successfully integrated into antenatal clinics, and potentially avert significant morbidity and mortality to unborn infants. A minority of male partners report for testing and treatment, increasing the likelihood of reinfection. We conducted a qualitative study...

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Autores principales: Nakku-Joloba, Edith, Kiguli, Juliet, Kayemba, Christine Nalwadda, Twimukye, Adeline, Mbazira, Joshua Kimeze, Parkes-Ratanshi, Rosalind, Birungi, Monica, Kyenkya, Joshua, Byamugisha, Josaphat, Gaydos, Charlotte, Manabe, Yukari C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6366113/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30727950
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12879-019-3695-y
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author Nakku-Joloba, Edith
Kiguli, Juliet
Kayemba, Christine Nalwadda
Twimukye, Adeline
Mbazira, Joshua Kimeze
Parkes-Ratanshi, Rosalind
Birungi, Monica
Kyenkya, Joshua
Byamugisha, Josaphat
Gaydos, Charlotte
Manabe, Yukari C.
author_facet Nakku-Joloba, Edith
Kiguli, Juliet
Kayemba, Christine Nalwadda
Twimukye, Adeline
Mbazira, Joshua Kimeze
Parkes-Ratanshi, Rosalind
Birungi, Monica
Kyenkya, Joshua
Byamugisha, Josaphat
Gaydos, Charlotte
Manabe, Yukari C.
author_sort Nakku-Joloba, Edith
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Syphilis screening can be successfully integrated into antenatal clinics, and potentially avert significant morbidity and mortality to unborn infants. A minority of male partners report for testing and treatment, increasing the likelihood of reinfection. We conducted a qualitative study to understand factors influencing male partners to seek treatment after syphilis notification by their pregnant partners. METHODS: A purposeful sample of 54 adults who participated in the STOP (Syphilis Treatment of Partners) study was stratified by gender (24 women, 30 male partners) and enrolled for in-depth interviews which were audio recorded, transcribed, and analyzed using the thematic approach. RESULTS: The participants’ median age (IQR) was 32 years (25–44), 87% were married, and 57.4% (31/74) had attained secondary education. Fourteen of 22 (63%) female participants reported that they sometimes experienced domestic violence. Male participant’s knowledge of syphilis and their perception of their valued role as responsible fathers of an unborn baby facilitated return. Female’s fear of partner‘s violence and poor communication between partners, were barriers against delivery of the notification forms to partners and subsequent treatment of partners. For men, fear of injection pain, perceptions of syphilis as a genetic disease and as a woman’s problem, busy work schedules, poor access to good STD services, shared facilities with women in clinics, as well as HIV-related stigma were important barrier factors. CONCLUSIONS: The return to the clinic for treatment of male partners after partner notification by infected pregnant women, was low due to limited knowledge about syphilis, fear of painful injection, fears of domestic violence, lack of communication skills (individual characteristics) and syphilis disease characteristics such as signs and symptoms. This, combined with health services characteristics such as structural barriers that hinder male partner treatment, low access, low capacity, work/time challenges, inadequate laboratory services and low clinic personnel capacity; threatens efforts to eliminate mother-to-child infection of syphilis. Improved public messaging about syphilis, better services, legal and policy frameworks supporting STD notification and treatment in resource-constrained settings are needed for effective STD control. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT02262390., Date Registered October 8 2014.
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spelling pubmed-63661132019-02-15 Perspectives on male partner notification and treatment for syphilis among antenatal women and their partners in Kampala and Wakiso districts, Uganda Nakku-Joloba, Edith Kiguli, Juliet Kayemba, Christine Nalwadda Twimukye, Adeline Mbazira, Joshua Kimeze Parkes-Ratanshi, Rosalind Birungi, Monica Kyenkya, Joshua Byamugisha, Josaphat Gaydos, Charlotte Manabe, Yukari C. BMC Infect Dis Research Article BACKGROUND: Syphilis screening can be successfully integrated into antenatal clinics, and potentially avert significant morbidity and mortality to unborn infants. A minority of male partners report for testing and treatment, increasing the likelihood of reinfection. We conducted a qualitative study to understand factors influencing male partners to seek treatment after syphilis notification by their pregnant partners. METHODS: A purposeful sample of 54 adults who participated in the STOP (Syphilis Treatment of Partners) study was stratified by gender (24 women, 30 male partners) and enrolled for in-depth interviews which were audio recorded, transcribed, and analyzed using the thematic approach. RESULTS: The participants’ median age (IQR) was 32 years (25–44), 87% were married, and 57.4% (31/74) had attained secondary education. Fourteen of 22 (63%) female participants reported that they sometimes experienced domestic violence. Male participant’s knowledge of syphilis and their perception of their valued role as responsible fathers of an unborn baby facilitated return. Female’s fear of partner‘s violence and poor communication between partners, were barriers against delivery of the notification forms to partners and subsequent treatment of partners. For men, fear of injection pain, perceptions of syphilis as a genetic disease and as a woman’s problem, busy work schedules, poor access to good STD services, shared facilities with women in clinics, as well as HIV-related stigma were important barrier factors. CONCLUSIONS: The return to the clinic for treatment of male partners after partner notification by infected pregnant women, was low due to limited knowledge about syphilis, fear of painful injection, fears of domestic violence, lack of communication skills (individual characteristics) and syphilis disease characteristics such as signs and symptoms. This, combined with health services characteristics such as structural barriers that hinder male partner treatment, low access, low capacity, work/time challenges, inadequate laboratory services and low clinic personnel capacity; threatens efforts to eliminate mother-to-child infection of syphilis. Improved public messaging about syphilis, better services, legal and policy frameworks supporting STD notification and treatment in resource-constrained settings are needed for effective STD control. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT02262390., Date Registered October 8 2014. BioMed Central 2019-02-06 /pmc/articles/PMC6366113/ /pubmed/30727950 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12879-019-3695-y Text en © The Author(s). 2019 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research Article
Nakku-Joloba, Edith
Kiguli, Juliet
Kayemba, Christine Nalwadda
Twimukye, Adeline
Mbazira, Joshua Kimeze
Parkes-Ratanshi, Rosalind
Birungi, Monica
Kyenkya, Joshua
Byamugisha, Josaphat
Gaydos, Charlotte
Manabe, Yukari C.
Perspectives on male partner notification and treatment for syphilis among antenatal women and their partners in Kampala and Wakiso districts, Uganda
title Perspectives on male partner notification and treatment for syphilis among antenatal women and their partners in Kampala and Wakiso districts, Uganda
title_full Perspectives on male partner notification and treatment for syphilis among antenatal women and their partners in Kampala and Wakiso districts, Uganda
title_fullStr Perspectives on male partner notification and treatment for syphilis among antenatal women and their partners in Kampala and Wakiso districts, Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Perspectives on male partner notification and treatment for syphilis among antenatal women and their partners in Kampala and Wakiso districts, Uganda
title_short Perspectives on male partner notification and treatment for syphilis among antenatal women and their partners in Kampala and Wakiso districts, Uganda
title_sort perspectives on male partner notification and treatment for syphilis among antenatal women and their partners in kampala and wakiso districts, uganda
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6366113/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30727950
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12879-019-3695-y
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