HIV vulnerability among adolescent girls and young women: A multi-country latent class analysis approach
Document Type
Article (peer-reviewed)
Publication Date
4-9-2020
Abstract
Objectives: To stem the HIV epidemic among adolescent girls and young women (AGYW, 15–24 years), prevention programs need to reach AGYW who are most at risk. We examine whether individual- and household-level factors could be used to define HIV vulnerability for AGYW. Methods: We surveyed out-of-school AGYW in urban and peri-urban Kenya (N = 1014), in urban Zambia (N = 846), and in rural Malawi (N = 1654) from October 2016 to 2017. LCA identified classes based on respondent characteristics, attitudes and knowledge, and household characteristics. Multilevel regressions examined associations between class membership and HIV-related health outcomes. Results: We identified two latent classes—high and low HIV vulnerability profiles—among AGYW in each country; 32% of the sample in Kenya, 53% in Malawi, and 51% in Zambia belonged to the high vulnerability group. As compared to AGYW with a low-vulnerability profile, AGYW with a high-vulnerability profile had significantly higher odds of HIV-related outcomes (e.g., very early sexual debut, transactional sex, sexual violence from partners). Conclusions: Out-of-school AGYW had differential vulnerability to HIV. Interventions should focus on reaching AGYW in the high HIV vulnerability profiles.
Recommended Citation
Mathur, Sanyukta, Nanlesta Pilgrim, Sangram Kishor Patel, Jerry Okal, Victor Mwapasa, Effie Chipeta, Maurice Musheke, Bidhubhusan Mahapatra, and Julie Pulerwitz. 2020. "HIV vulnerability among adolescent girls and young women: A multi-country latent class analysis approach," International Journal of Public Health 65(4): 399–411.
DOI
10.1007/s00038-020-01350-1
Language
English
Project
Reducing HIV Risk among Adolescent Girls and Young Women: Implementation Science around the DREAMS Initiative
Comments
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