1. Correlates of Safety Strategy Use Among South African Women Living With HIV and at Risk of Intimate Partner Violence.
- Author
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Brown, Leslie Lauren, Perkins, Jessica Mayson, Hargrove, Jami Lynn, Pahl, Kathryn Elenor, Mogoba, Phepo, and van Zyl, Michiel Adriaan
- Subjects
HIV-positive persons ,SAFETY ,RESEARCH ,CLERGY ,SOCIAL support ,BLACK people ,FAMILIES ,INTIMATE partner violence ,RISK assessment ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,WOMEN'S health - Abstract
Intimate partner violence (IPV) and HIV are correlated and endemic in South Africa. However, safety strategy use to prevent IPV among HIV-positive women is understudied. This study assesses correlates of specific safety strategy use among 166 Black South African women recently experiencing IPV and testing positive for HIV. Associations were observed between consultation with formal (i.e., counselors, clergy, IPV specialists) and informal networks (i.e., friends/family) and participant language (isi Zulu, isi Xhosa, Sesotho, and English), past year IPV, and engaging in HIV care. Future HIV-IPV programs should consider how characteristics of different IPV safety strategies may influence strategy uptake and ultimately HIV care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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