南非和乌干达艾滋病毒感染者孕期和产后过渡期间酒精使用变化的相关因素

IF 2.2 Q3 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Amelia M Stanton, Benjamin D Hornstein, Nicholas Musinguzi, Brett Dolotina, Catherine Orrell, Gideon Amanyire, Stephen Asiimwe, Anna Cross, Christina Psaros, David Bangsberg, Judith A Hahn, Jessica E Haberer, Lynn T Matthews
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引用次数: 0

摘要

确定与怀孕期间饮酒变化相关的因素对于制定针对艾滋病毒感染者(PWH)的干预措施非常重要。在乌干达和南非开始抗逆转录病毒治疗的孕妇PWH (n = 202)完成了两次评估,间隔6个月(T1, T2)。根据AUDIT-C评分得出分类:“不使用”(T1和T2时AUDIT-C =0),“新使用”(T1时AUDIT-C =0, T2时>0),“退出”(T1时AUDIT-C >0, T2时=0)和“继续使用”(T1和T2时AUDIT-C >0)。评估与这些类别相关的因素。大多数参与者“不使用”(68%),其次是“继续使用”(12%),“戒烟”(11%)和“新使用”(9%)。与伴侣同居与“继续使用”的相对风险较低有关。此外,还出现了粮食不安全与“新用途”更高风险之间以及污名化与“戒烟”可能性降低之间的边缘性显著关联。解决伙伴关系、粮食安全和污名的酒精使用干预措施可能有利于怀孕和产后PWH。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Factors Associated With Changes in Alcohol Use During Pregnancy and the Postpartum Transition Among People With HIV in South Africa and Uganda.

Factors Associated With Changes in Alcohol Use During Pregnancy and the Postpartum Transition Among People With HIV in South Africa and Uganda.

Factors Associated With Changes in Alcohol Use During Pregnancy and the Postpartum Transition Among People With HIV in South Africa and Uganda.

Factors Associated With Changes in Alcohol Use During Pregnancy and the Postpartum Transition Among People With HIV in South Africa and Uganda.

Identifying factors associated with alcohol use changes during pregnancy is important for developing interventions for people with HIV (PWH). Pregnant PWH (n = 202) initiating antiretroviral therapy in Uganda and South Africa completed two assessments, 6 months apart (T1, T2). Categories were derived based on AUDIT-C scores: "no use" (AUDIT-C = 0 at T1 and T2), "new use" (AUDIT-C = 0 at T1, >0 at T2), "quit" (AUDIT-C > 0 at T1, =0 at T2), and "continued use" (AUDIT-C > 0, T1 and T2). Factors associated with these categories were assessed. Most participants had "no use" (68%), followed by "continued use" (12%), "quit" (11%), and "new use" (9%). Cohabitating with a partner was associated with lower relative risk of "continued use." Borderline significant associations between food insecurity and higher risk of "new use" and between stigma and reduced likelihood of "quitting" also emerged. Alcohol use interventions that address partnership, food security, and stigma could benefit pregnant and postpartum PWH.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
43
审稿时长
13 weeks
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