There is limited published evidence about the status of HIV
among women who have had abortions or suffered from abortion complications.
Understanding this connection is critical for building the evidence base and
for guiding strategies to manage the sexual and reproductive health needs of
women living with HIV.
The purpose of this study is to determine
whether women who suffered incomplete abortion complications are more likely to
be HIV infected than those without complications. We hypothesized that women
with incomplete abortion complications have higher rates of HIV infection than women
who attended clinic for other obstetric reasons.
The analysis used a secondary dataset from a published
case–control study that enrolled 1) 70 women at discharge after receiving
in-patient care for complications resulting from induced abortion, and 2) 69
women (the comparison group) who visited the same hospital during the same time
period for other obstetric needs. The primary outcome was seeking care for
complications of incomplete abortion versus seeking care for other obstetric
needs (dichotomous). The primary exposure variable was self-reported HIV status
which was categorized into three groups: HIV positive, HIV negative, and HIV
unknown. Unadjusted and adjusted associations between being in the abortion
complications group, HIV status and other selected population characteristics
were estimated using univariate and multivariate logistic regression.
Of 139 women enrolled in this study. Seventy (50.4 %)
women had abortion complications and 69 (49.6 %) did not. Of the total
study population, 18 (12.9 %) were HIV positive, 50 (36.0 %) were HIV
negative, and the HIV status of 71 women (51.1 %) was unknown.
Compared to women who were HIV negative,
women who were HIV positive had similar odds of being in the abortion
complications group in both univariate and multivariate analyses (ρ =0.62 and ρ = 0.76).
However, compared to HIV-negative women, those women who did not know their HIV
status had greater odds of being in the abortion complications group (OR = 3.8,
95 % CI, 1.88, 8.20) in
univariate analysis. After adjusting for potential confounding variables, the
odds of being in the abortion complications group remained greater among women
who did not know their HIV status compared to HIV-negative women (adjusted OR = 2.8,
95 % CI, 1.20, 6.54).
This study points to the need for targeted interventions
aimed at strengthening the delivery and coverage of HIV-testing programs for
pregnant women and post-abortion care. In addition, more research is needed to
better understand the relationships between unsafe abortion, abortion
complications and unknown HIV status.
Below: Percentage of maternal death resulting from unsafe abortion (2008) [5], [6]. The figure shows that the proportion of maternal deaths due to unsafe abortion in Uganda (26%) far exceeds estimates for East Africa (18 %) and the World (13 %)
Full article
at: http://goo.gl/ci6rvZ
1Department of Health Services, Executive
MPH Program, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
2Department of Global Health, Global
Medicines Program, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
3Department of Pharmacy, Pharmaceutical
Outcomes Research and Policy Program, University of Washington, Seattle, WA,
USA
4Department of Biostatistics, University of
Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
5Tacoma 98409, WA, USA
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