학술논문

Factors Associated With Changes in Alcohol Use During Pregnancy and the Postpartum Transition Among People With HIV in South Africa and Uganda
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Public Health
Health Sciences
Prevention
Alcoholism
Alcohol Use and Health
HIV/AIDS
Behavioral and Social Science
Mental Health
Clinical Research
Substance Misuse
Pediatric
Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions
6.1 Pharmaceuticals
Cardiovascular
Good Health and Well Being
Female
Pregnancy
Humans
HIV Infections
South Africa
Uganda
Postpartum Period
Alcohol Drinking
HIV
sub-Saharan Africa
alcohol use
pregnancy
META Study Team
Language
Abstract
Identifying factors associated with alcohol use changes during pregnancy is important for developing interventions for people with HIV (PWH). Pregnant PWH (n = 202) initiating antiretroviral therapy in Uganda and South Africa completed two assessments, 6 months apart (T1, T2). Categories were derived based on AUDIT-C scores: "no use" (AUDIT-C = 0 at T1 and T2), "new use" (AUDIT-C = 0 at T1, >0 at T2), "quit" (AUDIT-C > 0 at T1, =0 at T2), and "continued use" (AUDIT-C > 0, T1 and T2). Factors associated with these categories were assessed. Most participants had "no use" (68%), followed by "continued use" (12%), "quit" (11%), and "new use" (9%). Cohabitating with a partner was associated with lower relative risk of "continued use." Borderline significant associations between food insecurity and higher risk of "new use" and between stigma and reduced likelihood of "quitting" also emerged. Alcohol use interventions that address partnership, food security, and stigma could benefit pregnant and postpartum PWH.