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Disability and HIV: an appraisal of the vulnerability of people with disabilities to HIV infection in Yaoundé, Cameroon (HandiVIH - ANRS 12302). Monitoring and Evaluation for Disability-inclusive Meeting. Need of more data on HIV among people with disabilities.
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Disability and HIV: an appraisal of the vulnerability of people with disabilities to HIV infection in Yaoundé, Cameroon (HandiVIH - ANRS 12302) Monitoring and Evaluation for Disability-inclusive Meeting
Need of more data on HIV among people with disabilities « One of the more hidden communities struggling with HIV is people with disabilities. Few programmes exist to enable their access to HIV prevention and treatment services […] because of a lack of data ». “We cannot run away from from the needs of […] people with disabilities” M Sidibe 20th International AIDS Conference Opening Session—Melbourne, Australia – IAS 2014
Methods • Design: • Population based study (Yaoundé, Cameroon) • Cross-sectional and comparative (control group) • Population: • People with disabilities: • Age: 15 to 49 years • Washington Group questionnaire: ≥ 1 major difficulty or 2 minor difficulties (>1 year) • Visual, hearing, physical, intellectual / mental limitations considered • Controls matched on age, sex and residential area • Procedures: • Two stages sampling • Face to face interviews (including interviewers with disabilities) • On site HIV testing using to rapid tests
Identification of people with disabilities eligible and of their controls Screening team Phase 1: screening + Phase 2
Identification of people with disabilities eligible and of their controls Screening team Phase 1: screening + Phase 2: Interview of eligible subjects HIV test • Interviews about • Disability and social participation • Life-course history • KBP HIV and FP • Reproductive Health • Access to services and health care
Statisticalmethods • Conditional logistic regression • Sub-group analysis: • Physical, visual, hearing intellectual / mental impairment • Impairment severity • Age of disability onset (<> 10 year) • Restriction of social participation? • Problem of the mediating factors (education, socio-economic level) • Sensitivity of results to test refusal
Results: study population • Disability screening: • End: October2015. • 177 Enumeration areas, 49 035 people screened (21 869households) • Interview of the people withdisabilities and controls: • End: 30th November 2015 • 807 personswithdisabilities and 807 matchedcontrols • (+ 40 personswithdisabilitiesbegging in the street and 30 personswithdisabilitiesmembers of DPO) • HIV test refusal: 9%
HIV infection Conditional Odds Ratio 1.7 [1.03 – 2.83]
Risk of HIV infection ORcond = 1.7 [1.03 – 2.83]
Risk of HIV infection ORcond = 1.7 [1.03 – 2.83]
Risk of HIV infection ORcond = 1.7 [1.03 – 2.83]
Acces to health care • Access to care reduced in PwD: • 17.5% vs 8% of women, 38% vs 25% of men (OR = 2.8, p<0.001) • 68% vs 76% of women who gave birth • More common difficulties (OR: 2.3 [1.80 – 2.94])
Wedid not have time to talk about • Role of social environment and network • Economic, family and worktrajectories • Role of DPO (Essomba et al. AFRAVIH 2016) • Dramaticvulnerability of PwDbegging(De Beaudrap et al. ICASA 2015) • HandiVIHin Burkina Faso • HandiVIH: whatnext ? • https://youtu.be/VYYD_e5mJe4
Conclusions • => Reduced knowledge • => Exposure to infection • HIV infection is more common among people with disabilities • Various risk factors: • Lack of information • Lack of access to education • Economic constraints • Sexual violences • Less access to care • Relation between HIV and disability is two-sided
Acknowledments Handicap International IFORD FOCAP ANRS Initiative 5% du Fonds Mondial Service de Coopération et d’Action Culturelle Sidaction IRD DPO of Yaoundé Sight Savers ACMS All people with disabilities and participants to this study HIV Outpatient services