54 research outputs found
Headship of older persons in the context of HIV/AIDS in rural South Africa
This paper examines older persons’ positions as heads of households in the Agincourt sub-district of Mpumalanga Province, South Africa. Older people’s access to non-contributory pensions in a context of AIDS-related chronic illness and premature death might increase their household responsibilities which, in turn, may be manifested in higher rates of household headship. We use descriptive analysis to outline the traits of household heads, compare household characteristics, in particular recent mortality experience, across headship types (male/female, pre/ post-pension eligibility). While some significant differences in household composition exist across headship types, older persons were no more likely to be heading households with a HIV/AIDS-related death over the 2000-2005 period—prior to extensive antiretroviral (ARV) rollout. This provides an important starting point for further investigations aimed at understanding the impact of HIV/AIDS on older persons’ lives, and as a baseline for measuring the effects of ARV rollout on older persons’ status in AIDS-endemic communities
They ‘don't cure old age’: older Ugandans’ delays to health-care access
ABSTRACT
Uganda's population is ageing, which comes with increased and varied burdens of disease and health-care needs. At the same time, gerontological care in Uganda remains neglected. This paper examines the factors that cause older Ugandans to delay health-care access. We conduct a thematic analysis of data drawn from nine focus groups held with rural Ugandans aged 60-plus. Our analysis highlights the factors that delay older persons’ access to health care and how these align with the Three-Delay Model, which was originally developed to assess and improve obstetric care in low-resource settings. Our participants report delays in deciding to seek care related to mobility and financial limitations, disease aetiology, severity and stigma (Delay I); reaching care because of poor roads and limited transportation options (Delay II); and receiving appropriate care because of ageism among health-care workers, and poorly staffed and under-supplied facilities (Delay III). We find these delays to care are interrelated and impacted by factors at the individual, community and health-system levels. We conclude by arguing for multi-pronged interventions that will address these delays, improve access to care and ultimately enhance older Ugandans’ health and wellbeing
"I was referred from the other side": Gender and HIV testing among older South Africans living with HIV
South Africa has a Universal Test and Treat (UTT) policy in place to ensure that everyone
tests for HIV and can access treatment if they test positive. The aim of this study is to document
the pathways that older South Africans who are living with HIV take to access testing
and treatment in this context. Despite the aging of the HIV epidemic in South Africa and
clear evidence that testing older persons (over age 50) is necessary, very little is known
about the circumstances under which older persons test for HIV or their motivations for
doing so. In this study, we analyze 21 qualitative, in-depth interviews with women and men
aged 50 and over who are living with HIV from two townships outside of Cape Town. Using
grounded theory to specify emerging themes, we find similarities and differences between
older men and women in their pathways to testing. Men primarily test for HIV when their
spouse is diagnosed or in connection with TB testing and treatment. Older women, who are
more likely to be widowed or divorced, often test for HIV only when they are symptomatic or
not responding appropriately to care for non-communicable diseases. Most importantly, we
find that older South Africans do not seek testing as a response to risk. Instead, older men
and women test only once they are symptomatic and referred by a provider, or as a result of
a partner's status. Our respondents, particularly the women, expressed ªshockº and confusion
at learning they were HIV-positive because they do not see themselves as at risk of
acquiring HIV. Because the benefits of UTT are greatest with early detection and treatment,
older persons' tendency to test at such a late stage of illness decreases the individual and
population level advantages of UTT. More research is needed to understand older persons'
risk and testing behavior so that policy and programs include HIV testing messages that
reach this population
Comparison of Antiretroviral Therapy Adherence Among HIV-Infected Older Adults with Younger Adults in Africa: Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.
As access to antiretroviral treatment in low- and middle-income countries improves, the number of older adults (aged ≥ 50 years) living with HIV is increasing. This study compares the adherence to antiretroviral treatment among older adults to that of younger adults living in Africa. We searched PubMed, Medline, Cochrane CENTRAL, CINAHL, Google Scholar and EMBASE for keywords (HIV, ART, compliance, adherence, age, Africa) on publications from 1st Jan 2000 to 1st March 2016. Eligible studies were pooled for meta-analysis using a random-effects model, with the odds ratio as the primary outcome. Twenty studies were included, among them were five randomised trials and five cohort studies. Overall, we pooled data for 148,819 individuals in two groups (older and younger adults) and found no significant difference in adherence between them [odds ratio (OR) 1.01; 95% CI 0.94-1.09]. Subgroup analyses of studies using medication possession ratio and clinician counts to measure adherence revealed higher proportions of older adults were adherent to medication regimens compared with younger adults (OR 1.06; 95% CI 1.02-1.11). Antiretroviral treatment adherence levels among older and younger adults in Africa are comparable. Further research is required to identify specific barriers to adherence in the aging HIV affected population in Africa which will help in development of interventions to improve their clinical outcomes and quality of life
How Midwestern College students protected their families in the first year of COVID-19
IntroductionCollege students routinely visit their families due to geographic proximity and their financial dependence. Consequently, the potential of transmitting COVID-19 from campus to their families’ homes is consequential. Family members are key sources of support for one another in nearly all matters but there is little research uncovering the mechanisms by which families have protected each other in the pandemic.MethodsThrough an exploratory qualitative study, we examined the perspectives of a diverse, randomly sampled, group of students from a Midwestern University (pseudonym), in a college town, to identify COVID-19 prevention practices with their family members. We interviewed 33 students between the end of December 2020 and mid-April 2021 and conducted a thematic analysis through an iterative process.ResultsStudents navigated major differences in opinions and undertook significant actions in attempts to protect their family members from COVID-19 exposure. Students’ actions were rooted in the greater good of public health; prosocial behavior was on display.DiscussionLarger public health initiatives could target the broader population by involving students as messengers
Chronic disease, risk factors and disability in adults aged 50 and above living with and without HIV: findings from the Wellbeing of Older People Study in Uganda.
BACKGROUND: Data on the prevalence of chronic conditions, their risk factors, and their associations with disability in older people living with and without HIV are scarce in sub-Saharan Africa. OBJECTIVES: In older people living with and without HIV in sub-Saharan Africa: 1) to describe the prevalence of chronic conditions and their risk factors and 2) to draw attention to associations between chronic conditions and disability. METHODS: Cross-sectional individual-level survey data from people aged 50 years and over living with and without HIV were analyzed from three study sites in Uganda. Diagnoses of chronic conditions were made through self-report, and disability was determined using the WHO Disability Assessment Schedule (WHODAS). We used ordered logistic regression and calculated predicted probabilities to show differences in the prevalence of multiple chronic conditions across HIV status, age groups, and locality. We used linear regression to determine associations between chronic conditions and the WHODAS. RESULTS: In total, 471 participants were surveyed; about half the respondents were living with HIV. The prevalence of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and eye problems (except for those aged 60-69 years) was higher in the HIV-positive participants and increased with age. The prevalence of diabetes and angina was higher in HIV-negative participants. The odds of having one or more compared with no chronic conditions were higher in women (OR 1.6, 95% CI 1.1-2.3) and in those aged 70 years and above (OR 2.1, 95% CI 1.2-3.6). Sleep problems (coefficient 14.2, 95% CI 7.3-21.0) and depression (coefficient 9.4, 95% CI 1.2-17.0) were strongly associated with higher disability scores. CONCLUSION: Chronic conditions are common in older adults and affect their functioning. Many of these conditions are not currently addressed by health services in Uganda. There is a need to revise health care policy and practice in Uganda to consider the health needs of older people, particularly as the numbers of people living into older age with HIV and other chronic conditions are increasing
Assessing the feasibility of a life history calendar to measure HIV risk and health in older South Africans
Life history calendars capture patterns of behavior over time, uncovering transitions and trajectories. Despite the growing numbers of older persons living with HIV in southern Africa, little is known about how HIV testing and risk unfold in this population. Operationalizing a life course approach with the use of an innovative Testing and Risk History Calendar [TRHC], we collected pilot data on older South Africans’ risk and HIV testing. We found older persons were able to provide (1) reference points to facilitate recall over a 10-year period, (2) specifics about HIV tests during that decade, and (3) details that contextualize the testing data, such as living arrangements, relationships, and health status. Interviewer debriefing sessions after each interview captured information on context and links across domains. On a larger scale, the TRHC has potential to reveal pathways between sexual behavior, HIV testing and risk perception, and health at older ages
Rural poverty dynamics and refugee communities in South Africa : a spatial-temporal model
The assimilation of refugees into their host community economic structures is often problematic. The paper
investigates the ability of refugees in rural South Africa to accumulate assets over time relative to their host
community. Bayesian spatial temporal modeling was employed to analyze a longitudinal database that indicated the
asset accumulation rate of former refugee households was similar to their host community, however, they were
unable to close the wealth gap. A series of geo-statistical wealth maps illustrate that there is a spatial element to the
higher levels of absolute poverty in the former refugee villages. The primary reason for this is their physical location
in drier conditions that are established further away from facilities and infrastructure. Neighboring South African
villages in close proximity, however, display lower levels of absolute poverty suggesting that the spatial location of
the refugees only partially explains their disadvantaged situation. In this regard, the results indicate that the wealth
of former refugee households continues to be more compromised by comparatively by higher mortality levels,
poorer education and less access to high return employment opportunities. The long term impact of low initial asset
status appears to be perpetuated in this instance by difficulties in obtaining legal status in order to access state
pensions, facilities and opportunities. The usefulness of the results is that they can be used to sharpen the targeting
of differentiated policy in a given geographical area for refugee communities in rural Africa.http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1002/(ISSN)1544-8452/hb201
The effects of HIV and systolic blood pressure on mortality risk in rural South Africa, 2010-2019: a data note
Objectives: South Africa is experiencing both HIV and hypertension epidemics. Data were compiled for a study to identify effects of HIV and high systolic blood pressure on mortality risk among people aged 40-plus in a rural South African area experiencing high prevalence of both conditions. We aim to release the replication data set for this study.
Data description: The research data comes from the 2010-11 Ha Nakekela (We Care) population-based survey nested in the Agincourt Health and socio-Demographic Surveillance System (AHDSS) located in the northeast region of South Africa. An age-sex-stratified probability sample was drawn from the AHDSS. The public data set includes information on individual socioeconomic characteristics and measures of HIV status and blood pressure for participants aged 40-plus by 2019. The AHDSS, through its annual surveillance, provided mortality data for nine years subsequent to the survey. These data were converted to person-year observations and linked to the individual-level survey data using participants’ AHDSS census identifier. The data can be used to replicate Houle et al. (2022) — which used discrete-time event history models stratified by sex to assess differential mortality risks according to Ha Nakekela measures of HIV-infection, HIV-1 RNA viral load, and systolic blood pressure
Social engagement and survival in people aged 50 years and over living with HIV and without HIV in Uganda: a prospective cohort study.
This study examined the association between social engagement and survival in people with or without HIV aged 50 years and over in Uganda. We analysed two waves of a survey from two sites in Uganda to assess predictors of mortality between waves. The first wave was conducted between 2009 and 2010 while the second wave was conducted between 2012 and 2013. A standardised questionnaire adapted from the World Health Organization study on global AGEing and adult health (SAGE) was administered through face-to-face interviews at both survey waves. Cox proportional hazards models and Nelson-Aalen cumulative hazards functions were used to investigate associations between the strength of participants' social ties, using distance and intimacy metrics, and their social engagement with mortality between waves. Of the original 510 participants, 63 (12.3%) died between waves. Being more socially engaged and able to provide in-kind or financial contributions to family or friends were protective. After adjusting for covariates neither social tie measure was predictive of mortality. There were no significant differences in social engagement and survival by HIV status. Further research is needed in African settings on the relationship between social relationships and subsequent mortality in older adults to assess if improved social relationships could moderate mortality
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