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Male Partner Involvement in Interventions to Prevent Mother - to - Child Transmission of HIV Echezona Ezeanolue, MD, MPH Professor, Public Health and Pediatrics Director, UNLV Global Health Initiative University of Nevada Las Vegas
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Nov 13, 2020

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Page 1: Male Partner Involvement in Interventions to Prevent Mother ...regist2.virology-education.com/.../11_Ezeanolue.pdfMale Partner Involvement in Interventions to Prevent Mother -to-Child

Male Partner Involvement in Interventions to Prevent Mother-to-Child Transmission of HIV

Echezona Ezeanolue, MD, MPHProfessor, Public Health and PediatricsDirector, UNLV Global Health Initiative

University of Nevada Las Vegas

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Impact of Male Partner Involvement• Several studies have documented increase in uptake of

PMTC interventions when male partners are involved

• Farquhar et al. 2004 (Kenya 2654 participants) – couple counseling increased uptake of nevirapine and formula feeding

• Msuya et al. 2008 (Tanzania 2654 participants) – male partner effect on uptake of HIV perinatal interventions

• Aluisio et al. 2011(Kenya 456 participants) – male antenatal attendance and HIV testing decreased infant HIV infection

• Jones et al. 2013 (South Africa 1611 participants)– male partner involvement reduced infant HIV incidence

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Barriers to Male Partner Involvement• Rates of male partners attending at least one ANC visit in SSA

• 1.8 to 32%

• INDIVIDUAL LEVEL• Lack of awareness about HIV• Perception of low personal risk• Disclosure

• COMMUNITY LEVEL• Gender norms that disapprove of male partners engaging in ANC

• HEALTH SYSTEM LEVEL• Poor attitudes of service providers • Timing of antenatal services during work hours

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The Healthy Beginning Initiative (HBI)

Prayer Session • Every Sunday in each church• Identify/recruit pregnant women and

husbands

Baby Shower • Edutainment/Reception• Onsite Integrated Testing (HIV, Hepatitis B, Sickle Cell Genotype, Hemoglobin, Malaria, Syphilis)

• Clinic referral

Baby Reception

• Edutainment• Newborn testing• Linkage to Care

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Specific Aims

• To determine whether HBI, a congregation-based intervention compared to clinic-based approach will increase:

• HIV testing among pregnant women

• HIV testing among male partners of pregnant women

• Linkage to care among HIV-infected pregnant women

Ezeanolue et al (2013). Implementation Science.

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HIV Testing among Pregnant WomenConfirmed HIV testing among pregnant women

Adjusted Odds Ratio for no HIV test

Ezeanolue et al. (2015). The Lancet. Global Health.

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Male Partner Involvement

Participation Rate

Confirmed HIV Testing among Male Partners

Adjusted Odds Ratio for No HIV Test

Ezeanolue et al. (2017). AIDS & Behavior

Total Subjects (N) Tested (N) Rate P valueContro l 1201 453 37.71 < 0.01Intervention 1297 1089 84.0

Females Males Participation RateParticipants 2809 2498 88.90%

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Challenges During Recruitment

• Skepticism from communities

• We used a “model” site approach and successful implemented the program in one model site

• Concerns about CG not getting the same benefits as IG

• We agreed to offer HIV testing to women in CG at the completion of the study

• Lack of trained research staff with proper knowledge of HIV

• We opted for community-based health advisors

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Challenges During Intervention

• Initial view of HBI as a female-focused program

• Emphasis on male partner involvement resulted in womenpresenting their brothers and brother-in-laws as male partner toenroll

• Participants attending other churches in order to receive asecond mama pack

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Challenges During Data Collection

• Low participants education required more assistance to completequestionnaires

• Lack of awareness of basic information such as DOB and income

• Population movement during study and significant infant death

• Reliability of phone numbers to clarify data

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Current Adaptations

• Integrating screening for perinatal depression

• Newborn Screening Program

• Linkage to care

• Retention in care

• Early Infant Diagnosis

Iheanacho et al. (2015). Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology; Burnham-Marusich et al. (2016). Public Health Genomics; Pharr et al. (2016). Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes

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Summary

• Barriers to male partner participation in antenatal care in sub-Saharan Africa include thetiming of antenatal services during work hours and negative health care provider attitudes

• Include gender norms against male participation that are anchored in deep-seatedperceptions that pregnancy is a woman’s affair

• Critically elements of success include the fact that it was conducted in communities wherereligious institutions and their leaders have strong community influence and where nearly90% of the population attends places of worship

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Summary

• It proposed integrated testing (hemoglobin, malaria, sickle cell genotype, HIV,hepatitis B, and syphilis) to reduce stigma associated with HIV testing.

• It included the hemoglobin test because men indicated in the formative stages that they wanted this test tofind out how strong they were.

• It engaged the couples publically, with the religious leader inviting all pregnant womenand their partners each Sunday to approach the altar for a prayer, accompanied byinformation about the baby shower program and the importance of antenatal care.

• The program ran baby showers monthly for all participants with the program group playingan educational game and being offered free integrated HIV testing.

• The control group was referred to a local health facility for antenatal care and free HIV testing.At baby receptions held every two to three months, the control groups were offered freeintegrated HIV testing.

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Summary• All in all, HIV testing for male partners was convenient, free, and integrated

with other tests that men wanted. Feasible, Acceptable, Sustainable andTransformational

• Such a strategy could work in other settings where influential communityleaders are prepared to lead the design and implementation of innovativeHIV prevention programmes that resonate with community cultural andspiritual values.

• It was provided in a family-centered, culturally adapted, congregation-basedenabling environment that supported men to step forward with their pregnantpartners to learn their HIV status. Framework for Community-BasedParticipatory Research

• Future Adaptations• Community screening for other health conditions e.g. DM; HTN

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HealthySunrise Foundation is a non-profit organization with a core mission to improve birth outcomes through enhanced maternal-

child health programs.

https://www.healthysunrise.org/what-we-do/