1. Prevalence and correlates of HIV, syphilis, and hepatitis knowledge among intrapartum patients and health care providers in Kabul, Afghanistan.
- Author
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Todd CS, Ahmadzai M, Atiqzai F, Smith JM, Miller S, Azfar P, Siddiqui H, Ghazanfar SA, and Strathdee SA
- Subjects
- Adult, Afghanistan epidemiology, Clinical Competence, Female, Hospitals, Maternity, Humans, Personnel, Hospital education, Personnel, Hospital psychology, Pregnancy, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, HIV Infections transmission, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Hepatitis B transmission, Syphilis transmission
- Abstract
Little is known about blood-borne infection awareness and knowledge among obstetric populations and health care providers in Afghanistan. HIV and hepatitis B awareness and knowledge are described among 4452 intrapartum patients completing an interviewer-administered questionnaire and whole-blood rapid testing and 123 obstetric care providers completing a questionnaire between June 2006 and September 2006. Participants were enrolled from three Kabul public maternity hospitals. Most participants were aware of HIV (50.8% of patients and 95.9% of providers) and hepatitis (72.1% of patients and 91.1% of providers). Correct transmission knowledge (defined as naming three correct routes and no incorrect routes) was lower for both groups (HIV: 19.4% for patients and 59.7% for providers; hepatitis B: 1.90% for patients and 33.9% for providers). Correct HIV transmission knowledge among providers was independently associated with level of education (AOR=1.75, 95% CI: 1.20-2.55). While HIV and hepatitis B awareness is common, correct and comprehensive knowledge is not. Continuing education for providers and health communications strategies should address identified knowledge gaps.
- Published
- 2009
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