学位论文详细信息
Mitigating intimate partner violence to promote safe linkage to care for South African women who test HIV+ during mobile counseling and testing.
HIV;South Africa;Intimate Partner Violence;Safety;Linkage to Care
Leslie Lauren Brown
University:University of Louisville
Department:Social Work
关键词: HIV;    South Africa;    Intimate Partner Violence;    Safety;    Linkage to Care;   
Others  :  https://ir.library.louisville.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3498&context=etd
美国|英语
来源: The Universite of Louisville's Institutional Repository
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【 摘 要 】

Sources warn the global HIV/AIDS epidemic will not be halted without significant reductions in Intimate partner violence (IPV). South African women have been hardest hit by the HIV-IPV link, suffering deleterious health outcomes as sequelae of significant barriers to HIV care. Extant literature focuses on HIV prevention, and there is a paucity of effective methods for mitigating IPV-related barriers among women living with HIV. This study was a Phase II trial testing the effectiveness and safety of the HIV IPV Risk and Safety (HIRS) protocol administered to women experiencing IPV and testing HIV+ during mobile HIV Counseling and Testing (HCT). Research questions compared experiences between a Standard of Care and an Experimental group with two dosage levels. All participants (N=255) were black South African females residing in Gauteng province and aged about 33 years (M=33). Two psychometric instruments were created for this study: the Danger Indicator and the HIRS scale with the latter having good reliability (Cronbach alpha .882) but both needing refinement in validity. The protocol was shown to be effective in mitigating violence upon partner notification of serostatus (X2(1) = 7.83, p=.005) and promoting linkage to care, with participants aged 33-43 years trending towards significant (X2(1) = 3.57, p=.059). The protocol was found to be feasible to implement, having impressive retention, brevity in administration, and high usage of safety strategies with minimal risks resulting from participation. Satisfaction was confirmed through positive participant ratings and safety through both non-significant group differences on the HIRS scale (t(1, 237)= -1.09; p= .278) and the perceived benefits of study participation far outweighing harms. Women receiving the protocol displayed notable self-determination towards self-protection and suffered significantly less re-assault upon partner notification. The number of participants utilizing certain safety strategies suggests this brief intervention was effective in galvanizing South African women to reclaim power and act towards the betterment of their health. Findings herald the promise of a protocol that effectively mitigates IPV to improve HIV outcomes. The effectiveness of the HIRS protocol, in facilitating safe partner notification of serostatus, could be a significant contribution to the knowledge base, but more research is needed to confirm these results.

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