Integrating prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission into antenatal care: learning from the experiences of women in South Africa
- 1 January 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in AIDS Care
- Vol. 16 (1), 37-46
- https://doi.org/10.1080/09540120310001633958
Abstract
In 1999, for the first time in South Africa, a Mother-to-Child HIV Transmission (MTCT) prevention programme was implemented at the routine primary care level and not as part of a research protocol. A total of 264 women attending prenatal care in these clinics were interviewed in Xhosa using a standardized questionnaire. All had been offered HIV testing, and 95% had accepted. Women who had not been tested were four times more likely to believe that in the community families reject HIV-positive women (pp<0.005); 86% stated that they would have taken AZT if found to be HIV positive. Only 11% considered that the use of formula feeding indicated that a woman was HIV positive. In conclusion, routine prenatal HIV testing and interventions to reduce perinatal HIV transmission are acceptable to the majority of women in a South African urban township, despite an awareness of discrimination in the community towards HIV-positive women.Keywords
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