Reprod. health; 18 (90), 2021
Ano de publicação: 2021
Antenatal care (ANC) clinics remain important entry points to HIV care for pregnant women living with
HIV—including adolescents. Prior knowledge of their HIV status at ANC enrollment is crucial to providing services for
prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT) of HIV. We examined known HIV status of pregnant adolescents
and women in other age groups at ANC enrollment.
Methods:
A descriptive study of routinely reported PMTCT data from 419 facilities in Eswatini, Ethiopia, and Mozambique, from January through December 2018 was conducted. We assessed knowledge of HIV status by country
for three age groups:
adolescents aged 15–19 years, young women aged 20–24 years, and older women aged
25–49 years. We report HIV prevalence and proportions of known and newly diagnosed HIV infections in women, by
age group and country. The data were summarized by frequencies and proportions, including their 95% confdence
intervals.
Results:
Among the facilities examined, 52 (12.4%) were in Eswatini, 63 (15.0%) in Ethiopia, and 304 (72.6%) in
Mozambique. Across three countries, 488,121 women attended a frst ANC visit and 23,917 (4.9%) were HIV-positive.
Adolescents constituted 22% of all ANC attendees, whereas young and older women represented 33% and 45%,
respectively. HIV prevalence was lowest among adolescents than in other age groups in Eswatini (adolescents 11.9%,
young 24.2% and older 47.3%), but comparable to young women in Ethiopia (adolescents 1.6%, young 1.6% and
older 2.2%) and Mozambique (adolescents 2.5%, young 2.5% and older 5.8%), However, in each of the three countries, lower proportions of adolescents knew their HIV-positive status before ANC enrollment compared to other age
groups: in Eswatini (adolescents 51.3%, young 59.9% and older 79.2%), in Ethiopia (adolescents 42.9%, young 63.7%
and older 75.2%), and in Mozambique (adolescents 16.4%, young 33.2% and older 45.6%).
Conclusion:
Overall, adolescents made up nearly one-quarter of the women examined and had the least knowledge
of their HIV status at ANC enrollment. Their HIV prevalence and known HIV-positive status varied widely across the
countries examined. Adolescent-friendly sexual and reproductive health, and PMTCT services, before pregnancy, are
needed to improve knowledge of HIV status and support pregnant adolescents and their infants.
Plain English summary:
Antenatal care (ANC) clinics are important for HIV testing of pregnant adolescents, who
may not know their HIV-positive status at the frst ANC visit. We describe data on pregnant adolescents and women in
other age groups in ANC services to examine their prior HIV status at ANC enrollment across three African countries.