Abstract

ABSTRACTMen’s poorer engagement with healthcare generally and HIV care specifically, compared to women, is well-described. Within the HIV public health domain, interest is growing in universal test and treat (UTT) strategies. UTT strategies refer to the expansion of antiretroviral therapy (ART) in order to reduce onward transmission and incidence of HIV in a population, through a “treatment as prevention” (TasP). This paper focuses on how masculinity influences engagement with HIV care in the context of an on-going TasP trial. Data were collected in January–November 2013 using 20 in-depth interviews, 10 of them repeated thrice, and 4 focus group discussions, each repeated four times. Analysis combined inductive and deductive approaches for coding and the review and consolidation of emerging themes. The accounts detailed men’s unwillingness to engage with HIV testing and care, seemingly tied to their pursuit of valued masculinity constructs such as having strength and control, being sexually competent, and earning income. Articulated through fears regarding getting an HIV-positive diagnosis, observations that men preferred traditional medicine and that primary health centres were not welcoming to men, descriptions that men used lay measures to ascertain HIV status, and insinuations by men that they were removed from HIV risk, the indisposition to HIV care contrasted markedly with an apparent readiness to test among women. Gendered tensions thus emerged which were amplified in the context where valued masculinity representations were constantly threatened. Amid the tensions, men struggled with disclosing their HIV status, and used various strategies to avoid or postpone disclosing, or disclose indirectly, while women’s ability to access care readily, use condoms, or communicate about HIV appeared similarly curtailed. UTT and TasP promotion should heed and incorporate into policy and health service delivery models the intrapersonal tensions, and the conflict, and poor and indirect communication at the micro-relational levels of couples and families.

Highlights

  • Men’s longer delay in seeking healthcare (Emslie, Ridge, Ziebland, & Hunt, 2006; White & Cash, 2003), higher likelihood of late HIV diagnosis (Corbett et al, 2004; Johnson, 2012), and lower likelihood of remaining in care and higher odds of experiencing deteriorating health after HIV diagnosis (Lessells, Mutevedzi, Cooke, & Newell, 2011; McGrath, Lessells, & Newell, 2015) compared to women are increasingly well-described

  • Articulated through fears regarding getting an HIV-positive diagnosis, observations that men preferred traditional medicine and that primary health centres were not welcoming to men, descriptions that men used lay measures to ascertain HIV status, and insinuations by men that they were removed from HIV risk, the indisposition to HIV care contrasted markedly with an apparent readiness to test among women

  • The HIV public health response is turning towards universal test and treat (UTT) strategies, that is, the expansion of antiretroviral therapy (ART) in order to reduce HIV transmission and incidence in a population, through a “treatment as prevention” (TasP) effect

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Summary

Introduction

Men’s longer delay in seeking healthcare (Emslie, Ridge, Ziebland, & Hunt, 2006; White & Cash, 2003), higher likelihood of late HIV diagnosis (Corbett et al, 2004; Johnson, 2012), and lower likelihood of remaining in care and higher odds of experiencing deteriorating health after HIV diagnosis (Lessells, Mutevedzi, Cooke, & Newell, 2011; McGrath, Lessells, & Newell, 2015) compared to women are increasingly well-described. The HIV public health response is turning towards universal test and treat (UTT) strategies, that is, the expansion of antiretroviral therapy (ART) in order to reduce HIV transmission and incidence in a population, through a “treatment as prevention” (TasP) effect. Using data from one of five trials currently underway in sub-Saharan Africa to evaluate the field efficacy of UTT, and driven partly by an expectation that UTT and TasP might change perspectives and behaviours of men, this paper examines the influence of masculinity on engagement with HIV care within a UTT and TasP trial context

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