Publication | Open Access
Violence Screening and Viral Load Suppression Among HIV-Positive Women of Color
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Citations
15
References
2015
Year
Hiv-positive WomenScreening ToolsSocial Determinants Of HealthDating ViolenceSocial SciencesPartner ViolenceViolence Against WomenGender StudiesBlack WomenViolenceComposite MeasureViral Load SuppressionViolence ScreeningPublic HealthIntimate Partner ViolenceDomestic ViolenceHealth SciencesSexual ViolenceIntersectionalityEpidemiologySexual HealthSexual AbuseDomestic Violence PreventionAggressionWomen's Health
Recent research suggests intimate partner violence (IPV) is commonly experienced by many people living with HIV/AIDS, which can complicate their care. We introduce a novel approach to screening for history of violence among 102 women of color living with HIV and receiving care at an outpatient public health clinic. Using a composite measure composed of data from a variety of screening tools, we were able to determine that 70.6% of the women had a history of violence using the composite measure, and that 43% screened positive using multiple screening tools. Although overall viral load suppression rate was high at 81.4%, women with a history of violence were less likely to be virally suppressed when compared to those without such a history (76.4% versus 93.3%, p<0.05). Our findings suggest using a variety of screening questions at entry and at follow-up care appointments may be key to identifying and supporting women survivors who may not disclose violence when first asked. Future research should foster further development, analysis, and use of a variety of screening tools such as those used in this study.
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