Abstract

BackgroundDespite the present HIV preventive and treatment programs, the prevalence of HIV is still high in eastern and southern Africa, among young women and populations at high.risk for HIV transmission such as sex workers. There is a need to prepare a suitable population that will participate in efficacy HIV vaccine trials to determine the efficacy of HIV vaccines that had proven to be safe and immune potent.MethodsIt was a cross-sectional study that recruited 600 female sex workers using respondent-driven sampling in Dar es Salaam. The study examined recruitment approaches, risk behaviors and willingness of young female sex workers to participate in an HIV vaccine trial. Descriptive statistics described risk behaviors and willingness of the participants to participate in efficacy HIV vaccine trials. The logistic regression model computed the likelihood of willingness to participate in the trials with selected variables.ResultsThe study demonstrated 53% were less than 20 years old, 96% were single, and 22% lived in brothels. Eighty percent of the participants started selling sex at the age between 15 and 19 years old, 61% used illicit drugs for the first time when they were less than 20 years old, 24% had anal sex ever. Eighty-nine percent had more than 20-lifetime sexual partners, and 56% had unprotected sexual intercourse with sex clients. Ninety-one percent expressed a willingness to participate in the HIV vaccine trial. Sixty-one percent did not need permission from anyone for participating in a trial. Ninety-one percent expressed willingness to participate in the efficacy of HIV vaccine trial. In the logistic regression model, willingness was significantly associated with the need to ask permission for participation in HIV vaccine trial from sex agent.ConclusionRespondent-driven sampling provided a rapid means of reaching young female sex workers who reported high-risk behaviors. The majority expressed a high level of willingness to participate in the HIV vaccine trial which was marginally correlated to the need to seek consent for participation in the trial from the sex brokers. Future HIV vaccine trials involving this population should consider involving the brokers in the trials because they form an essential part of the community for the participants.

Highlights

  • Despite the present Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) preventive and treatment programs, the prevalence of HIV is still high in eastern and southern Africa, among young women and populations at high. risk for HIV transmission such as sex workers

  • This study offers an understanding of means of recruitment, characteristics of the participants, risk behavior practices and other social dynamics existing in a population of vulnerable young female sex workers in DSM concerning participation in HIV vaccine trials in Tanzanian settings

  • Respondent driven sampling (RDS) provided rapid means of reaching young female sex workers with high-risk behaviors that might predispose to HIV infection

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Summary

Introduction

Despite the present HIV preventive and treatment programs, the prevalence of HIV is still high in eastern and southern Africa, among young women and populations at high. risk for HIV transmission such as sex workers. Despite the present HIV preventive and treatment programs, the prevalence of HIV is still high in eastern and southern Africa, among young women and populations at high. Since 2010, the new infections among young women and men globally (aged 15– 24 years) have declined by 17 and 16% respectively by 2016. In high-prevalence settings like eastern and southern Africa, young women aged 15–24 years remain at unacceptably high risk of HIV infection, accounting for 26% of new HIV infections in 2016 despite making up just 10% of the population [1]. In Tanzania, the overall HIV prevalence has been declining from an estimated 5.7% in 2012 [2] to 4.7% among adults ages 15 to 64 years in 2016/2017 [3]. This HIV prevalence among adults aged 15 years and older vary geographically across Tanzania, ranging from 11.4% in Njombe to less than 1 % in Lindi and Zanzibar [3]

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