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Young men’s experiences of violence and poverty and the relationship to sexually transmissible HIV: a cross sectional study from rural South Africa

Young men’s experiences of violence and poverty and the relationship to sexually transmissible HIV: a cross sectional study from rural South Africa
Young men’s experiences of violence and poverty and the relationship to sexually transmissible HIV: a cross sectional study from rural South Africa
Background: young men are inadequately engaged in HIV prevention and treatment globally, including in South Africa, increasing the likelihood of them having sexually transmissible HIV (i.e. living with HIV but with high viral loads). We sought to understand how men’s experiences of poverty and violence, impacted on transmissible HIV, directly or indirectly via mental health and substance misuse.

Setting: rural communities in northern KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.

Methods: cross-sectional population-based sample (September 2018-June 2019), assessing transmissible HIV (living with HIV and viral load ≥400 copies/mL, compared to individuals either not living with HIV, or living with HIV and viral load <400 copies/mL) via dried blood spots, and socio-demographic data. Structural equation models (SEM), assessed direct and indirect pathways from food insecurity and violence experience to transmissible-HIV, with mediators common mental disorders, alcohol use, gender inequitable attitudes and perceptions of low life chances.

Results: 2,086 (ages 13-35 years) men and 8.6%(n=178) men had transmissible HIV. There was no direct pathway from food insecurity, or violence experience, to transmissible HIV. Low perceptions of life chances mediated the relationship between food insecurity and transmissible HIV. Additionally increased poor mental health, via increased alcohol use, also mediated these relationships.

Conclusions: transmissible HIV was common among young men. The analysis highlights the need to address the proximate ‘drivers’ of low perceptions of life chances and substance misuse, and men’s experiences of poverty and violence. Building multicomponent interventions that engage these multiple challenges is critical for improving HIV among young men.
Gender, HIV/AIDS, Interpersonal Violence, Male, Mental Health, Poverty
1525-4135
Gibbs, Andrew
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Chirwa, Esnat
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Harling, Guy
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Chimbindi, Natsayi
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Dreyer, Jaco
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Herbst, Carina
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Okesola, Nonhlanhla
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Behuhuma, Ngundu Osee
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Mthiyane, Nondumiso
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Baisley, Kathy
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Zuma, Thembelihle
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Smit, Theresa
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Mcgrath, Nuala
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Sherr, Lorraine
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Seeley, Janet
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Shahmanesh, Maryam
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Gibbs, Andrew
f8698cc6-be6d-492f-aa04-f5901ad37394
Chirwa, Esnat
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Harling, Guy
0403b83a-0afe-472c-a184-7a6357afe29a
Chimbindi, Natsayi
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Dreyer, Jaco
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Herbst, Carina
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Okesola, Nonhlanhla
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Behuhuma, Ngundu Osee
527e3890-dde0-45fb-a99d-327eba2f4b6f
Mthiyane, Nondumiso
690c6e97-3df8-4d43-8d9d-9ab580369fd4
Baisley, Kathy
5fe8c276-d9d2-4bb6-91a3-8acd38a5151f
Zuma, Thembelihle
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Smit, Theresa
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Mcgrath, Nuala
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Sherr, Lorraine
dcc07842-49e3-44fc-bf87-d56dd0f15323
Seeley, Janet
f3106c01-ac91-4ffc-945a-6db3558fd8eb
Shahmanesh, Maryam
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Gibbs, Andrew, Chirwa, Esnat, Harling, Guy, Chimbindi, Natsayi, Dreyer, Jaco, Herbst, Carina, Okesola, Nonhlanhla, Behuhuma, Ngundu Osee, Mthiyane, Nondumiso, Baisley, Kathy, Zuma, Thembelihle, Smit, Theresa, Mcgrath, Nuala, Sherr, Lorraine, Seeley, Janet and Shahmanesh, Maryam (2025) Young men’s experiences of violence and poverty and the relationship to sexually transmissible HIV: a cross sectional study from rural South Africa. JAIDS Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes, [10.1097/QAI.0000000000003709]. (doi:10.1097/QAI.0000000000003709).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: young men are inadequately engaged in HIV prevention and treatment globally, including in South Africa, increasing the likelihood of them having sexually transmissible HIV (i.e. living with HIV but with high viral loads). We sought to understand how men’s experiences of poverty and violence, impacted on transmissible HIV, directly or indirectly via mental health and substance misuse.

Setting: rural communities in northern KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.

Methods: cross-sectional population-based sample (September 2018-June 2019), assessing transmissible HIV (living with HIV and viral load ≥400 copies/mL, compared to individuals either not living with HIV, or living with HIV and viral load <400 copies/mL) via dried blood spots, and socio-demographic data. Structural equation models (SEM), assessed direct and indirect pathways from food insecurity and violence experience to transmissible-HIV, with mediators common mental disorders, alcohol use, gender inequitable attitudes and perceptions of low life chances.

Results: 2,086 (ages 13-35 years) men and 8.6%(n=178) men had transmissible HIV. There was no direct pathway from food insecurity, or violence experience, to transmissible HIV. Low perceptions of life chances mediated the relationship between food insecurity and transmissible HIV. Additionally increased poor mental health, via increased alcohol use, also mediated these relationships.

Conclusions: transmissible HIV was common among young men. The analysis highlights the need to address the proximate ‘drivers’ of low perceptions of life chances and substance misuse, and men’s experiences of poverty and violence. Building multicomponent interventions that engage these multiple challenges is critical for improving HIV among young men.

Text
Gibbs men violence poverty transmissible HIV author accepted copy - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 7 May 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 20 June 2025
Keywords: Gender, HIV/AIDS, Interpersonal Violence, Male, Mental Health, Poverty

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 502936
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502936
ISSN: 1525-4135
PURE UUID: bb1f6e2d-5bb9-43ca-9815-bf638f93bbea
ORCID for Nuala Mcgrath: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1039-0159

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Date deposited: 14 Jul 2025 16:39
Last modified: 19 Jul 2025 01:49

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Contributors

Author: Andrew Gibbs
Author: Esnat Chirwa
Author: Guy Harling
Author: Natsayi Chimbindi
Author: Jaco Dreyer
Author: Carina Herbst
Author: Nonhlanhla Okesola
Author: Ngundu Osee Behuhuma
Author: Nondumiso Mthiyane
Author: Kathy Baisley
Author: Thembelihle Zuma
Author: Theresa Smit
Author: Nuala Mcgrath ORCID iD
Author: Lorraine Sherr
Author: Janet Seeley
Author: Maryam Shahmanesh

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