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Community-led cross-sectional study of social and employment circumstances, HIV and associated factors amongst female sex workers in South Africa: study protocol

BACKGROUND: In South Africa, female sex workers (FSWs) are perceived to play a pivotal role in the country’s HIV epidemic. Understanding their health status and risk factors for adverse health outcomes is foundational for developing evidence-based health care for this population. OBJECTIVE: Describe...

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Autores principales: Milovanovic, Minja, Jewkes, Rachel, Otwombe, Kennedy, Jaffer, Maya, Hopkins, Kathryn, Hlongwe, Khuthadzo, Mathaludi, Mokgadi, Mbowane, Venice, Gray, Glenda, Dunkle, Kristin, Hunt, Gillian, Welte, Alex, Kassanjee, Reshma, Slingers, Nevilene, Vanleeuw, Lieve, Puren, Adrian, Kinghorn, Anthony, Martinson, Neil, Abdullah, Fareed, Coetzee, Jenny
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Taylor & Francis 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8330713/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34338167
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16549716.2021.1953243
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author Milovanovic, Minja
Jewkes, Rachel
Otwombe, Kennedy
Jaffer, Maya
Hopkins, Kathryn
Hlongwe, Khuthadzo
Mathaludi, Mokgadi
Mbowane, Venice
Gray, Glenda
Dunkle, Kristin
Hunt, Gillian
Welte, Alex
Kassanjee, Reshma
Slingers, Nevilene
Vanleeuw, Lieve
Puren, Adrian
Kinghorn, Anthony
Martinson, Neil
Abdullah, Fareed
Coetzee, Jenny
author_facet Milovanovic, Minja
Jewkes, Rachel
Otwombe, Kennedy
Jaffer, Maya
Hopkins, Kathryn
Hlongwe, Khuthadzo
Mathaludi, Mokgadi
Mbowane, Venice
Gray, Glenda
Dunkle, Kristin
Hunt, Gillian
Welte, Alex
Kassanjee, Reshma
Slingers, Nevilene
Vanleeuw, Lieve
Puren, Adrian
Kinghorn, Anthony
Martinson, Neil
Abdullah, Fareed
Coetzee, Jenny
author_sort Milovanovic, Minja
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: In South Africa, female sex workers (FSWs) are perceived to play a pivotal role in the country’s HIV epidemic. Understanding their health status and risk factors for adverse health outcomes is foundational for developing evidence-based health care for this population. OBJECTIVE: Describe the methodology used to successfully implement a community-led study of social and employment circumstances, HIV and associated factors amongst FSWs in South Africa. METHOD: A community-centric, cross-sectional, survey of 3,005 adult FSWs was conducted (January–July 2019) on 12 Sex Work (SW) programme sites across nine provinces of South Africa. Sites had existing SW networks and support programmes providing peer education and HIV services. FSWs were involved in the study design, questionnaire development, and data collection. Questions included: demographic, sexual behaviour, HIV testing and treatment/PrEP history, and violence exposure. HIV rapid testing, viral load, CD4 count, HIV recency, and HIV drug resistance genotypic testing were undertaken. Partner organisations provided follow-up services. RESULTS: HIV Prevalence was 61.96%, the median length of selling sex was 6 years, and inconsistent condom use was reported by 81.6% of participants, 88.4% reported childhood trauma, 46.2% reported physical or sexual abuse by an intimate partner and 57.4% by a client. More than half of participants had depression and post-traumatic stress disorder (52.7% and 54.1%, respectively). CONCLUSION: This is the first national survey of HIV prevalence amongst FSWs in programmes in South Africa. The data highlight the vulnerability of this population to HIV, violence and mental ill health, suggesting the need for urgent law reform. Based on the unique methodology and the successful implementation alongside study partners, the outcomes will inform tailored interventions. Our rapid rate of enrolment, low rate of screening failure and low proportion of missing data showed the feasibility and importance of community-centric research with marginalised, highly vulnerable populations.
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spelling pubmed-83307132021-08-09 Community-led cross-sectional study of social and employment circumstances, HIV and associated factors amongst female sex workers in South Africa: study protocol Milovanovic, Minja Jewkes, Rachel Otwombe, Kennedy Jaffer, Maya Hopkins, Kathryn Hlongwe, Khuthadzo Mathaludi, Mokgadi Mbowane, Venice Gray, Glenda Dunkle, Kristin Hunt, Gillian Welte, Alex Kassanjee, Reshma Slingers, Nevilene Vanleeuw, Lieve Puren, Adrian Kinghorn, Anthony Martinson, Neil Abdullah, Fareed Coetzee, Jenny Glob Health Action Study Design Article BACKGROUND: In South Africa, female sex workers (FSWs) are perceived to play a pivotal role in the country’s HIV epidemic. Understanding their health status and risk factors for adverse health outcomes is foundational for developing evidence-based health care for this population. OBJECTIVE: Describe the methodology used to successfully implement a community-led study of social and employment circumstances, HIV and associated factors amongst FSWs in South Africa. METHOD: A community-centric, cross-sectional, survey of 3,005 adult FSWs was conducted (January–July 2019) on 12 Sex Work (SW) programme sites across nine provinces of South Africa. Sites had existing SW networks and support programmes providing peer education and HIV services. FSWs were involved in the study design, questionnaire development, and data collection. Questions included: demographic, sexual behaviour, HIV testing and treatment/PrEP history, and violence exposure. HIV rapid testing, viral load, CD4 count, HIV recency, and HIV drug resistance genotypic testing were undertaken. Partner organisations provided follow-up services. RESULTS: HIV Prevalence was 61.96%, the median length of selling sex was 6 years, and inconsistent condom use was reported by 81.6% of participants, 88.4% reported childhood trauma, 46.2% reported physical or sexual abuse by an intimate partner and 57.4% by a client. More than half of participants had depression and post-traumatic stress disorder (52.7% and 54.1%, respectively). CONCLUSION: This is the first national survey of HIV prevalence amongst FSWs in programmes in South Africa. The data highlight the vulnerability of this population to HIV, violence and mental ill health, suggesting the need for urgent law reform. Based on the unique methodology and the successful implementation alongside study partners, the outcomes will inform tailored interventions. Our rapid rate of enrolment, low rate of screening failure and low proportion of missing data showed the feasibility and importance of community-centric research with marginalised, highly vulnerable populations. Taylor & Francis 2021-08-02 /pmc/articles/PMC8330713/ /pubmed/34338167 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16549716.2021.1953243 Text en © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Study Design Article
Milovanovic, Minja
Jewkes, Rachel
Otwombe, Kennedy
Jaffer, Maya
Hopkins, Kathryn
Hlongwe, Khuthadzo
Mathaludi, Mokgadi
Mbowane, Venice
Gray, Glenda
Dunkle, Kristin
Hunt, Gillian
Welte, Alex
Kassanjee, Reshma
Slingers, Nevilene
Vanleeuw, Lieve
Puren, Adrian
Kinghorn, Anthony
Martinson, Neil
Abdullah, Fareed
Coetzee, Jenny
Community-led cross-sectional study of social and employment circumstances, HIV and associated factors amongst female sex workers in South Africa: study protocol
title Community-led cross-sectional study of social and employment circumstances, HIV and associated factors amongst female sex workers in South Africa: study protocol
title_full Community-led cross-sectional study of social and employment circumstances, HIV and associated factors amongst female sex workers in South Africa: study protocol
title_fullStr Community-led cross-sectional study of social and employment circumstances, HIV and associated factors amongst female sex workers in South Africa: study protocol
title_full_unstemmed Community-led cross-sectional study of social and employment circumstances, HIV and associated factors amongst female sex workers in South Africa: study protocol
title_short Community-led cross-sectional study of social and employment circumstances, HIV and associated factors amongst female sex workers in South Africa: study protocol
title_sort community-led cross-sectional study of social and employment circumstances, hiv and associated factors amongst female sex workers in south africa: study protocol
topic Study Design Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8330713/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34338167
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16549716.2021.1953243
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