Abstract

IntroductionEfficacious antiretroviral treatment (ART) enables people to live long and healthy lives with HIV but young people are dying from AIDS‐related causes more than ever before. Qualitative evidence suggest that various forms of HIV‐related discrimination and resulting shame act as profound barriers to young people’s engagement with HIV services. However, the impact of these risks on adolescent retention in HIV care has not been quantified. This study has two aims: (1) to examine whether and how different types of discrimination compromise retention in care among adolescents living with HIV in South Africa; and (2) to test whether internalized stigma mediates these relationships.MethodsBetween 2014 and 2017, adolescents living with HIV (aged 10 to 19) from 53 health facilities in the Eastern Cape, South Africa, were interviewed at baseline (n = 1059) and 18‐month follow‐up (n = 979, 92.4%), with responses linked to medical records. Data were analysed through multiple regression and mediation models.ResultsAbout 37.9% of adolescents reported full retention in care over the 2‐year period, which was associated with reduced odds of viral failure (OR: 0.371; 95% CI: .224, .614). At baseline, 6.9% of adolescents reported discrimination due to their HIV status; 14.9% reported discrimination due to HIV in their families and 19.1% reported discrimination in healthcare settings. Healthcare discrimination was associated with reduced retention in care both directly (effect: −0.120; CI: −0.190, −0.049) and indirectly through heightened internalized stigma (effect: 0.329; 95% CI: 0.129, 0.531). Discrimination due to family HIV was associated with reduced retention in care both directly (effect: −0.074, CI: −0.146, −0.002) and indirectly through heightened internalized stigma (effect: 0.816, CI: 0.494, 1.140). Discrimination due to adolescent HIV was associated with reduced retention in care only indirectly, through increased internalized stigma (effect: 0.408; CI: 0.102, 0.715).ConclusionsLess than half of adolescents reported 2‐year retention in HIV care. Multiple forms of discrimination and the resultant internalized stigma contributed to this problem. More intervention research is urgently needed to design and test adolescent‐centred interventions so that young people living with HIV can live long and healthy lives in the era of efficacious anti‐retroviral treatment.

Highlights

  • Efficacious antiretroviral treatment (ART) enables people to live long and healthy lives with HIV but young people are dying from AIDS-related causes more than ever before

  • Existing intervention research is focused on clinic-based interventions [5], which are essential but insufficient to meet the complex needs of adolescents living with HIV [3,4], including adolescents who are not engaging with the health system

  • The study was developed in collaboration with the South African Departments of Health and Basic Education, UNICEF, PEPFAR-USAID, regional and local NGOs and an advisory group of 20 South African adolescents with the primary aim of understanding non-adherence and non-retention in HIV care among adolescents living with HIV

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Summary

Introduction

Efficacious antiretroviral treatment (ART) enables people to live long and healthy lives with HIV but young people are dying from AIDS-related causes more than ever before. Healthcare discrimination was associated with reduced retention in care both directly (effect: À0.120; CI: À0.190, À0.049) and indirectly through heightened internalized stigma (effect: 0.329; 95% CI: 0.129, 0.531). Discrimination due to family HIV was associated with reduced retention in care both directly (effect: À0.074, CI: À0.146, À0.002) and indirectly through heightened internalized stigma (effect: 0.816, CI: 0.494, 1.140). Discrimination due to adolescent HIV was associated with reduced retention in care only indirectly, through increased internalized stigma (effect: 0.408; CI: 0.102, 0.715). At a time when efficacious antiretroviral treatment (ART) enables people living with HIV to live long and healthy lives, young people between the ages of 13 and 24 are the only age group for whom AIDS-related mortality is on the rise [2]. Young people living with HIV (ages 15 to 24) had a higher risk of both discrimination victimization and internalized stigma than any older age group [17]

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