1. Perinatal Depressive Symptoms and Viral Non-suppression Among a Prospective Cohort of Pregnant Women Living with HIV in Nigeria, Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania
- Author
-
Concepcion, Tessa, Velloza, Jennifer, Kemp, Christopher G, Bhat, Amritha, Bennett, Ian M, Rao, Deepa, Polyak, Christina S, Ake, Julie A, Esber, Allahna, Dear, Nicole, Maswai, Jonah, Owuoth, John, Sing’oei, Valentine, Bahemana, Emmanuel, Iroezindu, Michael, Kibuuka, Hannah, and Collins, Pamela Y
- Subjects
Midwifery ,Health Sciences ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Brain Disorders ,HIV/AIDS ,Pediatric ,Depression ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Infectious Diseases ,Infection ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Pregnancy ,Female ,Humans ,Pregnant Women ,Cohort Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Uganda ,Kenya ,Nigeria ,Tanzania ,HIV Infections ,HIV ,AIDS ,Perinatal ,Africa ,Viral non-suppression ,Public Health and Health Services ,Social Work ,Public Health ,Public health - Abstract
Depression is common during pregnancy and is associated with reduced adherence to HIV-related care, though little is known about perinatal trajectories of depression and viral suppression among women living with HIV (WLHV) in sub-Saharan Africa. We sought to assess any association between perinatal depressive symptoms and viral non-suppression among WLWH. Depressive symptomatology and viral load data were collected every 6 months from WLWH enrolled in the African Cohort Study (AFRICOS; January 2013-February 2020). Generalized estimating equations modeled associations between depressive symptoms [Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression (CES-D) ≥ 16] and viral non-suppression. Of 1722 WLWH, 248 (14.4%) had at least one pregnancy (291 total) and for 61 pregnancies (21.0%), women reported depressive symptoms (13.4% pre-conception, 7.6% pregnancy, 5.5% one-year postpartum). Depressive symptomatology was associated with increased odds of viral non-suppression (aOR 2.2; 95% CI 1.2-4.0, p = 0.011). Identification and treatment of depression among women with HIV may improve HIV outcomes for mothers.
- Published
- 2023