Abstract

Introduction: Variation in the proportion of individuals living in a stable HIV sero-discordant partnership (SDP), and the potential drivers of such variability across sub Saharan Africa (SSA), are still not well-understood. This study aimed to examine the spatial clustering of HIV sero-discordancy, and the impact of local variation in HIV prevalence on patterns of sero-discordancy in high HIV prevalence countries in SSA. Methods: We described the spatial patterns of sero-discordancy among stable couples by analyzing Demographic and Health Survey data from Cameroon, Kenya, Lesotho, Tanzania, Malawi, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. We identified spatial clusters of SDPs in each country through a Kulldorff spatial scan statistics analysis. After a geographical cluster was identified, epidemiologic measures of sero-discordancy were calculated and analyzed. Results: Spatial clusters with significantly high numbers of SDPs were identified and characterized in Kenya, Malawi, and Tanzania, and they largely overlapped with the clusters with high HIV prevalence. There was a positive correlation between HIV prevalence and the proportion of SDPs among all stable couples across within and outside clusters. Conversely, there was a negative, but weak and not significant, correlation between HIV prevalence and the proportion of SDPs among all stable couples with at least one HIV-infected individual in the partnership. Discussion: There does not appear to be distinct spatial patterns for HIV sero-discordancy that are independent of HIV prevalence patterns. The variation of the sero-discordancy measures with HIV prevalence across clusters and outside clusters demonstrated similar patterns to those observed at the national level. The spatial variable does not appear to be a fundamental nor independent determinant of the observed patterns of sero-discordancy in high HIV prevalence countries in SSA.

Highlights

  • Variation in the proportion of individuals living in a stable HIV sero-discordant partnership (SDP), and the potential drivers of such variability across sub SaharanAfrica (SSA), are still not well-understood

  • The variation in the proportion of individuals living in a stable HIV sero-discordant partnership (SDPs; i.e., one partner testing HIV seropositive, while the other testing HIV seronegative) [1,2,3], and the potential drivers of variability in HIV sero-discordancy patterns across sub Saharan Africa (SSA) are still not well understood

  • There is an intense discussion regarding the potential role of HIV seroconversions among SDPs in the HIV epidemic in SSA, and the prioritization of HIV control interventions focused on HIV discordant couples over other intervention approaches [4,5,6,7,8]

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Summary

Introduction

Variation in the proportion of individuals living in a stable HIV sero-discordant partnership (SDP), and the potential drivers of such variability across sub SaharanAfrica (SSA), are still not well-understood. Variation in the proportion of individuals living in a stable HIV sero-discordant partnership (SDP), and the potential drivers of such variability across sub Saharan. There was a positive correlation between HIV prevalence and the proportion of SDPs among all stable couples across within and outside clusters. The spatial variable does not appear to be a fundamental nor independent determinant of the observed patterns of sero-discordancy in high HIV prevalence countries in SSA. The variation in the proportion of individuals living in a stable HIV sero-discordant partnership (SDPs; i.e., one partner testing HIV seropositive, while the other testing HIV seronegative) [1,2,3], and the potential drivers of variability in HIV sero-discordancy patterns across sub Saharan Africa (SSA) are still not well understood. Public Health 2016, 13, 865; doi:10.3390/ijerph13090865 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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