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Continued very high prevalence of HIV infection in rural KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa: a population-based longitudinal study

Continued very high prevalence of HIV infection in rural KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa: a population-based longitudinal study
Continued very high prevalence of HIV infection in rural KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa: a population-based longitudinal study
Objective
To estimate the prevalence of HIV and associated sociodemographic factors including mobility and migration in a rural population in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.

Methods
A household-based HIV serosurvey of a population that has been under longitudinal demographic surveillance since 2000. All residents (women aged 15-49 years; men aged 15-54 years) and a sample of non-residents ('migrants') who return periodically to their households in the area were identified and approached for finger-prick HIV testing.

Results
A total of 8325/11 505 male and 11 542/14 396 female residents were traced. Of these, 4692 men and 6859 women consented to HIV testing. Overall, 27% of female and 13.5% of male residents were HIV infected. HIV prevalence peaked at 51% among resident women aged 25-29 years and 44% among resident men aged 30-34 years, with the highest infection rates of 57.5% among 26-year-old women. The female: male infection ratio for residents aged 15-19 years was 13.0. Many factors, including increased mobility, associated with an increased risk of HIV infection among residents, were also associated with non-participation. Among non-residents, 34% of men aged 15-54 years and 41% of women aged 15-49 years were HIV infected.

Conclusion
The extremely high prevalence of HIV suggests an urgent need to allocate adequate resources for HIV prevention and treatment in rural areas. Effective monitoring of the epidemic in Africa needs to include efforts to strengthen sentinel surveillance in rural areas and strategies for the surveillance of migrants and mobile individuals.
1467-1472
Welz, Tanya
1a87edf5-45a1-4ba1-a8b8-f4a53de00d30
Hosegood, Victoria
c59a89d5-5edc-42dd-b282-f44458fd2993
Jaffar, Shabbar
b65ba138-d593-4bcd-a928-3cba04cb6342
Bätzing-Feigenbaum, Jörg
80a0a2c5-9237-4f1e-a49f-bcad9ba6e8f3
Herbst, Kobus
fab67269-11ef-4c52-91bc-635b00065504
Newell, Marie-Louise
c6ff99dd-c23b-4fef-a846-a221fe2522b3
Welz, Tanya
1a87edf5-45a1-4ba1-a8b8-f4a53de00d30
Hosegood, Victoria
c59a89d5-5edc-42dd-b282-f44458fd2993
Jaffar, Shabbar
b65ba138-d593-4bcd-a928-3cba04cb6342
Bätzing-Feigenbaum, Jörg
80a0a2c5-9237-4f1e-a49f-bcad9ba6e8f3
Herbst, Kobus
fab67269-11ef-4c52-91bc-635b00065504
Newell, Marie-Louise
c6ff99dd-c23b-4fef-a846-a221fe2522b3

Welz, Tanya, Hosegood, Victoria, Jaffar, Shabbar, Bätzing-Feigenbaum, Jörg, Herbst, Kobus and Newell, Marie-Louise (2007) Continued very high prevalence of HIV infection in rural KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa: a population-based longitudinal study. AIDS, 21 (11), 1467-1472. (doi:10.1097/QAD.0b013e3280ef6af2). (PMID:17589193)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective
To estimate the prevalence of HIV and associated sociodemographic factors including mobility and migration in a rural population in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.

Methods
A household-based HIV serosurvey of a population that has been under longitudinal demographic surveillance since 2000. All residents (women aged 15-49 years; men aged 15-54 years) and a sample of non-residents ('migrants') who return periodically to their households in the area were identified and approached for finger-prick HIV testing.

Results
A total of 8325/11 505 male and 11 542/14 396 female residents were traced. Of these, 4692 men and 6859 women consented to HIV testing. Overall, 27% of female and 13.5% of male residents were HIV infected. HIV prevalence peaked at 51% among resident women aged 25-29 years and 44% among resident men aged 30-34 years, with the highest infection rates of 57.5% among 26-year-old women. The female: male infection ratio for residents aged 15-19 years was 13.0. Many factors, including increased mobility, associated with an increased risk of HIV infection among residents, were also associated with non-participation. Among non-residents, 34% of men aged 15-54 years and 41% of women aged 15-49 years were HIV infected.

Conclusion
The extremely high prevalence of HIV suggests an urgent need to allocate adequate resources for HIV prevention and treatment in rural areas. Effective monitoring of the epidemic in Africa needs to include efforts to strengthen sentinel surveillance in rural areas and strategies for the surveillance of migrants and mobile individuals.

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Published date: 11 July 2007
Organisations: Social Statistics & Demography

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 351458
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/351458
PURE UUID: 6e7580a8-0cf5-4fa3-9a37-c2dad5dbdac2
ORCID for Victoria Hosegood: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2244-2518
ORCID for Marie-Louise Newell: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1074-7699

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 13 May 2013 14:10
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:47

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Contributors

Author: Tanya Welz
Author: Shabbar Jaffar
Author: Jörg Bätzing-Feigenbaum
Author: Kobus Herbst

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