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HIV Prevention in Kenya: Lessons Learned from the 2007 Kenya AIDS Indicator Survey. HIV Prevention in Kenya: Lessons Learned from the 2007 Kenya AIDS Indicator Survey. Carol Ngare KAIS TWG Member, NASCOP-MOH Prevention Summit 2008. The Kenya AIDS Indicator Survey 2007.
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HIV Prevention in Kenya:Lessons Learned from the 2007 Kenya AIDS Indicator Survey HIV Prevention in Kenya:Lessons Learned from the 2007 Kenya AIDS Indicator Survey Carol Ngare KAIS TWG Member, NASCOP-MOH Prevention Summit 2008
The Kenya AIDS Indicator Survey 2007 • Nationally-representative HIV serosurvey • ~18,000 individuals from nearly 10,000 households • Includes older adults age 50-64 • Prevalence of HIV, HSV-2 and syphilis • Coverage of HIV services
4 Components of KAIS • Household Questionnaire • Individual Questionnaire • Blood Draw • Return of Result
Differences from KDHS 2003 • KAIS allows • examination of older adults 50-64 years old • comparisons of persons’ perceived HIV status to actual HIV status • HSV-2 • Return of results • CD4 counts measured • KAIS-KDHS comparisons restricted to men and women 15-49
HIV peaks for younger women and older men, but remains an issue across age groups
Dramatic disparity in HIV prevalence across provinces National Prevalence: 7.4%
Nyanza & RV are home to over 50% of all HIV infected persons in Kenya
Rural areas have witnessed an increase in HIV prevalence Ages 15-49
From Prevalence to Prevention:Assessing Key Domains of Prevention Efforts in Kenya
Key Concerns of Current Prevention Efforts • HIV testing • Knowledge of HIV status and disclosure between partners • Partner HIV discordance • Male circumcision • HIV awareness and knowledge • Youth sexuality • Older adults
HIV TESTING • Prevention Relevance • Increase accurate knowledge of status, and reduce transmission/acquisition risk • Prevention Goal • Increase the number of persons testing, particularly among those at higher risk of HIV transmission/acquisition
Testing has increased in recent years, especially among women
…but we are far from the 2010 target of 80% universal CT coverage 48% Gap 68% Gap
Increased testing among women is likely a result of increased ANC testing
Testing rates show little difference across provinces . . . Ages 15-64
Testing: Summary • Trend is improving, but long way to go from testing target • ANC testing has increased among pregnant women • Acceptability of home testing is high • Testing among men and in rural areas lagging • Gap in testing among older adults • Testing gap in high prevalence provinces
Knowledge of HIV Status & Disclosure • Prevention Relevance • Knowledge of serostatus and proper disclosure to sexual partners can help reduce new infections • Prevention Goals • Increase knowledge of serostatus • Increase disclosure between sexual partners • Increase condom use when serostatus is unknown
82% of HIV+ adults do not know they are HIV infected Did Not Report Status Correctly reported HIV positive Never Tested Believed themselves uninfected based on last test 82% 15-64 year olds who were KAIS laboratory-confirmed HIV infected, n=1104
Most people do not know their partners’ status • Never tested: 89% do not know partners’ status • Tested and believe themselves negative: 60% do not know partners’ status • Reported HIV positive: 36% do not know partners’ status
Consistent condom use is low with partners of unknown HIV status
Knowledge of Status & Disclosure: Summary • Most HIV+ persons do not know they are infected. • Most persons do not know the HIV status of their partners. • Consistent condom use is low. • Those who know they are HIV+ are more likely to know HIV status of partners.
HIV Discordance • Prevention Relevance • Long-term discordant couples are at higher risk of HIV transmission/acquisition due to frequency of sexual contact • Prevention Goal • Increase awareness of discordance between couples • Promote safer sex practices among serodiscordant couples
Discordance in Kenya 6% of all married/cohabitating couples are HIV discordantNearly 400,000 discordant couples in Kenya (200,000 in Nyanza and RV)Nearly 50% of all married/cohabitating HIV+ men and women have an HIV uninfected partner
Condom use with married/cohabitating partners is highest among positives who correctly reported their HIV status
Male Circumcision • Prevention Relevance • Research suggests that male circumcision is associated with substantially lower HIV acquisition for men. • Prevention Goals • Increase awareness of potential benefits of circumcision • Promote voluntary circumcision among adult men • Encourage parents to have male childrencircumcised
Circumcision is associated with lower individual HIV risk among men Among men age 30-54 who are not circumcised 30% are HIV infected
HIV Knowledge & Attitudes • Prevention Relevance • Increased knowledge of HIV should help promote risk-reducing behaviors • Reduced stigma will support secondary HIV prevention through care and treatment of infected individuals • Prevention Goals • Increase HIV knowledge in general public and high risk populations • Decrease stigma of HIV throughout population
Radio is the most common source of HIV information Top 5 sources of information, 15-64
Knowledge Questions • 9 questions on general acquisition/transmission • “Can people reduce their chance of getting the AIDS virus by using a condom every time they have sex?” • “If a woman has the virus that causes AIDS, does her sexual partner always have the AIDS virus, almost always, or only sometimes?” • 3 questions on mother-to-child transmission pathways • “Can the virus that causes AIDS be transmitted… during pregnancy?”
School education is associated with comprehensive HIV knowledge • Of the 12 major questions • 56% of men and women answered 9 or more correctly • 40% answered 5-8 items correctly • 4% answered fewer than 5 correctly • Educational background was an important determinant of comprehensive HIV knowledge • 19% of those with no primary education answered fewer than 5 items correctly, compared to • 1% of those who completed primary school or beyond
Comprehensive HIV knowledge is not associated with differences in prevalence
Attitudes Questions • 70-90% agreed with the following individual statements • “I would buy fresh vegetables from a vendor who has HIV” • “I would not want the status of an HIV-positive family member to remain secret” • “I am willing to care for a relative with HIV at home” • “I believe an HIV-positive teacher should be allowed to continue teaching”
Among women there is an increase in accepting attitudes Percent agreeing with all 4 items, ages 15-49
Knowledge & Attitudes: Summary • Radio is the most common means of reaching people with HIV information • Comprehensive knowledge was low, especially among those with little formal education • HIV knowledge alone is not associated with reduced HIV infection • PMTCT knowledge is growing for women • Stigma remains a challenge, but improvements are evident among women
Youth Sexuality (age 15-24) • Prevention Relevance • Delayed initiation and safer sex during early sexual development can help reduce HIV acquisition • Prevention Goals • Increase age of sexual initiation • Increase condom use among youth
Marriage and early sexual initiation are associated with higher HIV prevalence among young women Very few young men were married (n=228). Youth, 15-24
Youth Sexuality: Summary • Marriage at young ages is strongly associated with HIV prevalence • Some decline in proportion of men having sex by age 15 • Few young women have sex with men 10 or more years older
HIV in Older Adults • 85% of older adults have never tested for HIV • 88% of older adults do not know the HIV status of their marital/cohabitating partners • Condom use is very low • Less than 2% report consistent condom use with marital/cohabitating partners
HIV in Older Adults (cont.) • Older women have higher proportion of undiagnosed HIV infection • HIV is almost 3 times higher among formerly married older adults (widowed, separated, divorced) than those currently married
Lessons Learned • Know your status; know your partners’ status • Need for ‘repeat’ testing and disclosure • Condom use remains low • Re-evaluate common perceptions of ‘high risk groups’ • Married couples • Uncircumcised men • Older adults need to be targeted as much as our focus on youth
Acknowledgements • MOH-NASCOP • NACC • KNBS • NPHLS • NCAPD • KEMRI • PEPFAR through CDC & USAID • UNAIDS/WHO • All TWG Members