BMJ Global Health (Dec 2023)

The health inequity and socioeconomic inequality faced by adolescent girls and women on the move living with or at high risk of HIV infection, during the COVID-19 pandemic in Nigeria

  • Greg Ashefor,
  • Morenike Oluwatoyin Folayan,
  • Matthew Kavanagh,
  • Koubagnine Takpa,
  • Pamela Ogbozor,
  • Veronica Undelikwo,
  • Oluwatoyin Alaba,
  • Erik Lamontagne,
  • Hasiya Yunusa Nyako,
  • Amaka Enemo,
  • Aaron Sunday,
  • Amira Muhammad,
  • Rilwan Mohammed Abdullah,
  • Henry Okiwu,
  • Oluwaranmilowo Amusan,
  • Gabriel Undelikwo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2023-012116
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 12

Abstract

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Background We assessed if women and girls on the move living with or at high risk of HIV faced increased health inequity and socioeconomic inequalities during the COVID-19 pandemic compared with other vulnerable women and girls.Methods We used data collected through a survey conducted in Nigeria between June and October 2021. Women and girls living with or at risk of HIV were recruited voluntarily, using a combination of venue-based and snowball sampling. We performed multivariable logistic regression models per mobility and HIV status to determine associations between health inequity, socioeconomic inequalities and macrosocial characteristics.Findings There were 3442 participants, of which 700 were on the move. We found no statistical difference between HIV-negative women and girls on the move and those not on the move. On the opposite, we found substantial differences in health inequity and socioeconomic inequalities between women and girls on the move living with HIV and those not on the move living with HIV. There are very strong associations between being a woman or girl on the move living with HIV and facing economic precarity (aOR 6.08, 95% CI 1.94 to 19.03), food insecurity (aOR 5.96, 95% CI 2.16 to 16.50) and experiencing more gender-based violence since COVID-19 started (aOR 5.61, 95% CI 3.01 to 10.47).Interpretation Being a woman or girl on the move and living with HIV compound increased health and socioeconomic vulnerabilities. The COVID-19 crisis seems to have exacerbated inequalities and gender-based violence. These findings call for more feminist interventions to protect women on the move living with HIV during health crises.