PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Knowledge of HIV serodiscordance, transmission, and prevention among couples in Durban, South Africa.

  • William Kilembe,
  • Kristin M Wall,
  • Mammekwa Mokgoro,
  • Annie Mwaanga,
  • Elisabeth Dissen,
  • Miriam Kamusoko,
  • Hilda Phiri,
  • Jean Sakulanda,
  • Jonathan Davitte,
  • Tarylee Reddy,
  • Mark Brockman,
  • Thumbi Ndung'u,
  • Susan Allen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0124548
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 4
p. e0124548

Abstract

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Couples' voluntary HIV counseling and testing (CVCT) significantly decreases HIV transmission within couples, the largest risk group in sub-Saharan Africa, but it is not currently offered in most HIV testing facilities. To roll out such an intervention, understanding locale-specific knowledge barriers is critical. In this study, we measured knowledge of HIV serodiscordance, transmission, and prevention before and after receipt of CVCT services in Durban.Pre- and post-CVCT knowledge surveys were administered to a selection of individuals seeking CVCT services.Changes in knowledge scores were assessed with McNemar Chi-square tests for balanced data and generalized estimating equation methods for unbalanced data.The survey included 317 heterosexual black couples (634 individuals) who were primarily Zulu (87%), unemployed (47%), and had at least a secondary level education (78%). 28% of couples proved to be discordant. Only 30% of individuals thought serodiscordance between couples was possible pre-CVCT compared to 95% post-CVCT. One-third thought there was at least one benefit of CVCT pre-CVCT, increasing to 96% post-CVCT. Overall, there were positive changes in knowledge about HIV transmission and prevention. However, many respondents thought all HIV positive mothers give birth to babies with AIDS (64% pre-CVCT, 59% post-CVCT) and that male circumcision does not protect negative men against HIV (70% pre-CVCT, 67% post-CVCT).CVCT was well received and was followed by improvements in understanding of discordance, the benefits of joint testing, and HIV transmission. Country-level health messaging would benefit from targeting gaps in knowledge about serodiscordance, vertical transmission, and male circumcision.