The Pan African Medical Journal (Nov 2017)
Evolution of HIV prevalence and behavioral factors among MSM in Togo between 2011 and 2015
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: the aim of this study was to assess sexual behavior and measure HIV prevalence among MSM in 2015, in Togo. METHODS: we conducted a cross-sectional study from February to March 2015 in nine major cities of Togo. The respondent-driven sampling method was used to recruit MSM. Behavioral data were collected by interviewer-administered questionnaires. The blood tests were then carried out among MSM to assess their HIV status. Data were inputted into an Epidata database and exported to STAT 9.0 for analysis. Qualitative variables were compared using the chi-2. RESULTS: a total of 496 MSM were involved in this study, with 43.35% in the capital, Lome. Over the past 12 months, 88.9% of MSM had had sexual intercourse with men and 24.1% of them had had sex with women. The last sexual intercourse was with a casual partner among 52.9% of MSM. During the last 30 days preceding the survey, 68.5% of MSM had regularly used a condom during active anal intercourse and 71.9% had used it during passive anal intercourse. The national prevalence rate of HIV among MSM was 13.0%. The factors associated with HIV infection were age of MSM OR = 5.30 [1.85-15.1], HIV testing history OR = 2.63 [1.18-5.87], and the city of residence of MSM OR = 5.56 [2.90-10.64]. CONCLUSION: this study confirms that HIV prevalence among MSM is five times higher than in the general population (13% vs 2.5%). Thus, the need to rethink HIV sensitization and prevention strategies targeting hidden and stigmatized populations such as MSM.
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