Abstract

BackgroundUganda has registered a reduction in new HIV infections among children in recent years. However, mother-to-child transmission of HIV still occurs, especially among pregnant women who present late. To eliminate this transmission, all HIV-positive pregnant women should be identified during antenatal HIV testing. We described women newly identified HIV-positive during pregnancy and postnatal period 2015–2018.MethodsWe extracted surveillance data for women identified as HIV-positive during pregnancy and the postnatal period reported through the Health Management Information System from 2015–2018. We calculated proportions newly positive at antenatal, labor, and postnatal periods nationally and at district levels. We disaggregated data into ‘tested early’ (during antenatal care) and ‘tested late’ (during labor or postnatal period) and calculated the proportion positive. We evaluated trends in these parameters at national and district levels.ResultsOverall, 8,485,854 mothers were tested for HIV during this period. Of these, 2.4% tested HIV-positive for the first time. While the total number of mothers tested increased from 1,327,022 in 2015 to 2,514,212 in 2018, the proportion testing HIV-positive decreased from 3.0% in 2015 to 1.7% in 2018 (43% decline over the study period, p < 0.001). Of 6,781,047 tested early, 2.2% tested HIV-positive. The proportion positive among those tested early dropped from 2.5% in 2015 to 1.7% in 2018. Of 1,704,807 tested late, 3.2% tested HIV-positive. The proportion positive among those tested late dropped from 5.2% in 2015 to 1.6% in 2018. At the district level, Kalangala District had the highest proportion testing positive at 13% (909/11,312) in 2015; this dropped to 5.2% (169/3278) in 2018.ConclusionThe proportion of women newly testing HIV-positive during pregnancy and postnatal declined significantly during 2015–2018. A higher proportion of mothers who tested late vs early were HIV-positive. Failure to identify HIV early represents an increased risk of transmission. Ministry of Health should strengthen Elimination of Mother to Child Transmission (eMTCT) services to sustain this decrease through targeted interventions for poorly-performing districts. It should strengthen community-based health education on antenatal care and HIV testing and enhance the implementation of other primary prevention strategies targeting adolescents and young women.

Highlights

  • Uganda has registered a reduction in new Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infections among children in recent years

  • We described HIV-positive mothers identified during pregnancy and post-natal periods using Health Management Information System (HMIS) data from 2015–2018

  • HIV testing yield during pregnancy and postnatal period, Uganda, 2015–2018 A total of 8,485,854 pregnant women were newly tested during antenatal care (ANC), labor/delivery, and breastfeeding periods during 2015–2018

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Summary

Introduction

Uganda has registered a reduction in new HIV infections among children in recent years. Mother-to-child transmission of HIV still occurs, especially among pregnant women who present late. To eliminate this transmission, all HIV-positive pregnant women should be identified during antenatal HIV testing. Wibabara et al AIDS Res Ther (2021) 18:35 transfusion it available, mother-to-child transmission of HIV (MTCT) is virtually the only way that infants acquire HIV. Without any interventions for prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT), the risk of an infant acquiring HIV infection from an HIV-positive mother in developing countries is 25–45% [2]. Despite marked progress in reducing the new HIV infections in Uganda, among children, and minimizing AIDS-related deaths, the country continues to have a high burden of HIV. The prevalence was even higher among women, at 7.6%, compared to 4.7% among men [3]

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