1. Examining the contraceptive decisions of young, HIV-infected women: A qualitative study.
- Author
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Brown JL, Haddad LB, Gause NK, Cordes S, Bess C, King CC, Hatfield-Timajchy K, Chakraborty R, and Kourtis AP
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Grounded Theory, HIV Infections psychology, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Qualitative Research, United States, Young Adult, Choice Behavior, Contraception methods, Decision Making, HIV Infections diagnosis, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
- Abstract
This study qualitatively examined factors that influenced contraceptive choices in a sample of young, HIV-infected women. Individual qualitative interviews were conducted among 30 vertically and horizontally HIV-infected women (n = 26 African American) from the ages of 14 to 24 years (Mean age = 20.9 years). We recruited sample groups with the following characteristics: (a) current contraceptive/condom use with ≥1 child (n = 11); (b) current contraceptive/condom use with no children (n = 12); and (c) no current contraceptive/condom use with no children (n = 7). A semi-structured interview guide was used to ask participants about factors influencing past and current contraceptive choices. Individual interviews were digitally recorded and transcribed verbatim; analyses to identify core themes were informed by the Grounded Theoretical approach. Young, HIV-infected women did not identify their HIV serostatus or disease-related concerns as influential in their contraceptive decisions. However, they reported that recommendations from health-care providers and input from family and friends influenced their contraceptive choices. They also considered a particular method's advantages (e.g., menstrual cycle improvements) and disadvantages (e.g., increased pill burden) when selecting a method. Findings suggested that HIV-infected young women's contraceptive decisions were influenced by factors other than those related to their infection.
- Published
- 2019
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