Abstract
HIV diagnosis is a watershed in women's childbearing experience. It is usually accompanied by the fear of death and stigmatisation. Women diagnosed of HIV are often sceptical about pregnancy. Meanwhile, availability of antiretroviral treatments has impacted positively on childbearing experience among women living with HIV. We therefore investigated the timing of first childbirth after HIV diagnosis and its determinants among women in Ibadan, Nigeria. We extracted and analysed data from a 2015 cross-sectional study on childbearing progression among 933 women living with HIV and receiving care at University College Hospital, Ibadan, Nigeria. Extended Cox proportional hazards regression, a semi-parametric event history model was used at 5% significance level. The women's mean age was 38.1 (± SD = 6.1) years and the median time to first birth after HIV diagnosis (FBI_HIV) was 8 years. The likelihood of first birth after HIV diagnosis was lower among women who desired more children (HR = 0.63, CI: 0.51-0.78). Women whose partners had primary and secondary education respectively were about 2.3 times more likely to shorten FBI_HIV compared to those whose partners had no formal education. Knowledge of partner's HIV-positive status (HR = 1.42, CI: 1.04,1.93) increased the likelihood of having a first birth after HIV diagnosis. Older age, longer duration on ART and a higher number of children at diagnosis were associated with a declined hazard of first birth after HIV diagnosis. The median time to first childbirth after HIV diagnosis was long. Partner's HIV-positive status and higher educational attainment were associated with early childbearing after HIV diagnosis.
Highlights
HIV prevalence remains a public health challenge in Nigeria
Availability of antiretroviral treatments has impacted positively on childbearing experience among women living with HIV
We extracted and analysed data from a 2015 cross-sectional study on childbearing progression among 933 women living with HIV and receiving care at University College Hospital, Ibadan, Nigeria
Summary
HIV prevalence remains a public health challenge in Nigeria. As the second epicentre of HIV infection globally, Nigeria contributed about 75% of new HIV infections in West and Central Africa in 2016 [1]. According to the recent UNAIDS report, the national HIV prevalence among adult aged 15–49 years is 1.5% [2], of which women have considerable higher prevalence of 1.9% compared to men [3]. Many of those individuals living with HIV are women who desire to affirm their motherhood. Even in the era of effective ART, empirical studies have established that HIV diagnosis may significantly influence women’s decision and timing to have the child birth or otherwise [8,9,10,11]. We investigated the timing of first childbirth after HIV diagnosis and its determinants among women in Ibadan, Nigeria.
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