Publication | Open Access
Fertility desires and condom use among HIV-positive women at an antiretroviral roll-out program in Zimbabwe.
30
Citations
13
References
2010
Year
Hiv-positive WomenFamily MedicineContraceptive UseQuality Of LifeFertilityTeenage PregnancyContraception PatternsContraceptive DiscontinuationReproductive HealthGynecologyContraceptionPublic HealthSexual And Reproductive HealthFertility DesiresPregnancy PreventionInfertilityTransactional SexArt StatusMaternal HealthFertility PolicyHivSexual BehaviorSexual HealthTreatment And PreventionGlobal HealthContraceptive UptakeCondom UseMedicineWomen's Health
As access to anti-retroviral therapy (ART) increases in sub-Saharan Africa, fertility and contraception patterns are likely to change. Two hundred HIV-positive women at an ART roll-out site in Zimbabwe responded to a questionnaire on fertility desires and condom use. Ten women (5%) reported planning a pregnancy in the next year, comprising 0% of women not yet eligible for ART, 8.22% of women on the waitlist for ART, and 4.17% of women on ART. Younger age, fewer living children, and higher quality of life were individually associated with intended pregnancy in the next year; however in multivariate analysis only the association with higher quality of life remained significant. Reported ever use of condoms was relatively low (46.5%) and condom use varied by neither ART status nor by fertility desires. In conclusion, our data demonstrates fertility desires among HIV-positive women in Zimbabwe correlate with higher perceived quality of life.
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