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Individual and population-level risk factors for new HIV infections among adults in Eastern and Southern Africa

Individual and population-level risk factors for new HIV infections among adults in Eastern and Southern Africa
Individual and population-level risk factors for new HIV infections among adults in Eastern and Southern Africa
Despite substantial recent declines, general population HIV incidence in sub-Saharan Africa remains above international targets. Better description of risk factors for new infections would improve prioritisation of interventions. Using data from population-based cohorts in Kenya, Malawi, Tanzania, South Africa, Uganda, Zimbabwe we described the prevalence of risk factors for men and women aged 15-24 and 25-49 and estimated the association between individual and community-level risk factors and HIV acquisition between 2005 and 2016. Among 43,434 men and 55,919 women aged 15 to 49 there were 4,612 seroconversions. Education, marital status, male circumcision, new sexual partners, types of partner, prevalence of untreated HIV infection in the community and community partner acquisition rates were associated with HIV incidence. Only the prevalence of untreated HIV was a risk for both sexes and apparent at all ages. The prevalence of risk factors varied by age, sex and study. HIV incidence was higher in people aged 25-49 living in communities where men had high partner acquisition rates. Our results show potential for improved prevention through changed timing of prevention interventions relative to behaviour and the utility of using community characteristics to target prevention.
2041-1723
Slaymaker, Emma
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Calvert, Clara
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Marston, Milly
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Risher, Kathryn
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Eaton, J.W.
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Moorhouse, Louisa
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Price, Alison
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Abdul, Ramadhani
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Dube, Albert
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Nabukalu, Dorean
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Obor, David
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McLean, Estelle
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Tlhajoane, Malebogo
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Tomlin, Keith
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Urassa, Mark
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Baisley, Kathy
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Crampin, Amelia C.
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Geubbels, Eveline
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Gregson, Simon
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Herbst, Kobus
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Kwaro, Daniel
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Lutalo, Tom
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Newton, Robert
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Todd, Jim
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Mcgrath, Nuala
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ALPHA Network
Slaymaker, Emma
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Calvert, Clara
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Marston, Milly
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Risher, Kathryn
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Eaton, J.W.
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Moorhouse, Louisa
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Price, Alison
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Abdul, Ramadhani
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Dube, Albert
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Nabukalu, Dorean
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Obor, David
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McLean, Estelle
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Tlhajoane, Malebogo
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Tomlin, Keith
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Urassa, Mark
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Baisley, Kathy
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Crampin, Amelia C.
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Geubbels, Eveline
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Gregson, Simon
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Herbst, Kobus
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Kwaro, Daniel
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Lutalo, Tom
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Newton, Robert
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Todd, Jim
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Mcgrath, Nuala
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Slaymaker, Emma, Calvert, Clara, Marston, Milly, Risher, Kathryn, Eaton, J.W., Moorhouse, Louisa, Price, Alison, Abdul, Ramadhani, Dube, Albert, Nabukalu, Dorean, Obor, David, McLean, Estelle, Tlhajoane, Malebogo, Tomlin, Keith, Urassa, Mark, Baisley, Kathy, Crampin, Amelia C., Geubbels, Eveline, Gregson, Simon, Herbst, Kobus, Kwaro, Daniel, Lutalo, Tom, Newton, Robert and Todd, Jim , ALPHA Network (2026) Individual and population-level risk factors for new HIV infections among adults in Eastern and Southern Africa. Nature Communications, 17.

Record type: Article

Abstract

Despite substantial recent declines, general population HIV incidence in sub-Saharan Africa remains above international targets. Better description of risk factors for new infections would improve prioritisation of interventions. Using data from population-based cohorts in Kenya, Malawi, Tanzania, South Africa, Uganda, Zimbabwe we described the prevalence of risk factors for men and women aged 15-24 and 25-49 and estimated the association between individual and community-level risk factors and HIV acquisition between 2005 and 2016. Among 43,434 men and 55,919 women aged 15 to 49 there were 4,612 seroconversions. Education, marital status, male circumcision, new sexual partners, types of partner, prevalence of untreated HIV infection in the community and community partner acquisition rates were associated with HIV incidence. Only the prevalence of untreated HIV was a risk for both sexes and apparent at all ages. The prevalence of risk factors varied by age, sex and study. HIV incidence was higher in people aged 25-49 living in communities where men had high partner acquisition rates. Our results show potential for improved prevention through changed timing of prevention interventions relative to behaviour and the utility of using community characteristics to target prevention.

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Accepted/In Press date: 19 November 2025
Published date: 6 January 2026

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 509047
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/509047
ISSN: 2041-1723
PURE UUID: ab90442b-4189-4daa-94f5-795ab7ad187c
ORCID for Nuala Mcgrath: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1039-0159

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Date deposited: 10 Feb 2026 17:50
Last modified: 11 Feb 2026 02:47

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Contributors

Author: Emma Slaymaker
Author: Clara Calvert
Author: Milly Marston
Author: Kathryn Risher
Author: J.W. Eaton
Author: Louisa Moorhouse
Author: Alison Price
Author: Ramadhani Abdul
Author: Albert Dube
Author: Dorean Nabukalu
Author: David Obor
Author: Estelle McLean
Author: Malebogo Tlhajoane
Author: Keith Tomlin
Author: Mark Urassa
Author: Kathy Baisley
Author: Amelia C. Crampin
Author: Eveline Geubbels
Author: Simon Gregson
Author: Kobus Herbst
Author: Daniel Kwaro
Author: Tom Lutalo
Author: Robert Newton
Author: Jim Todd
Author: Nuala Mcgrath ORCID iD
Corporate Author: ALPHA Network

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