Journal of the International Association of Providers of AIDS Care (May 2024)

Clinical Implications of HIV Treatment and Prevention for Polygamous Families in Kenya and Uganda: “My Co-Wife Is the One Who Used to Encourage Me”

  • Jason Johnson-Peretz MPhil (Oxon), MAOM,
  • Anjeline Onyango BA,
  • Sarah A. Gutin PhD, MPH,
  • Laura Balzer PhD,
  • Cecilia Akatukwasa MPH, BSc,
  • Lawrence Owino BSc,
  • Titus M. O. Arunga BSc,
  • Fred Atwine BA,
  • Maya Petersen MD, PhD,
  • Moses Kamya MMed, PhD,
  • James Ayieko MBChb, MPH, PhD,
  • Ted Ruel MD,
  • Diane Havlir MD,
  • Carol S. Camlin PhD, MPH

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/23259582241255171
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23

Abstract

Read online

Polygamy is the practice of marriage to multiple partners. Approximately 6-11% of households in Uganda and 4-11% of households in Kenya are polygamous. The complex families produced by polygamous marriage customs give rise to additional considerations for healthcare providers and public health messaging around HIV care. Using 27 in-depth, semi-structured qualitative interviews with participants in two studies in rural Kenya and Uganda, we analysed challenges and opportunities that polygamous families presented in the diagnosis, treatment and prevention of HIV, and provider roles in improving HIV outcomes in these families. Overall, prevention methods seemed more justifiable to families where co-wives live far apart than when all members live in the same household. In treatment, diagnosis of one member did not always lead to disclosure to other members, creating an adverse home environment; but sometimes diagnosis of one wife led not only to diagnosis of the other, but also to greater household support.