Living with Uncertainty: Acting in the Best Interests of Women


Autoria(s): Gollub, Erica; Stein, Zena
Data(s)

25/09/2012

Resumo

A recent multi-country study on hormonal contraceptives (HC) and HIV acquisition and transmission among African HIV-serodiscordant couples reported a statistically significant doubling of risk for HIV acquisition among women as well as transmission from women to men for injectable contraceptives. Together with a prior cohort study on African women seeking health services, these data are the strongest yet to appear on the HC-HIV risk. This paper will briefly review the Heffron study strengths and relevant biological and epidemiologic evidence; address the futility of further trials; and propose instead an alternative framework for next steps. The weight of the evidence calls for a discontinuation of progestin-dominant methods. We propose here five types of productive activities: (1) scaling injectable hormones down and out of the contraceptive mix; (2) strengthening and introducing public health strategies with proven potential to reduce HIV spread; (3) providing maximal choice to reduce unplanned pregnancy, starting with quality sexuality education through to safe abortion access; (4) expanding provider training, end-user counseling and access to male and female barriers, with a special renewed focus on female condom; (5) initiating a serious research agenda to determine anti-STI/HIV potential of the contraceptive cervical cap. Trusting women to make informed choices is critical to achieve real progress in dual protection.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/com_facpub/11

http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1010&context=com_facpub

Publicador

FIU Digital Commons

Direitos

by

Fonte

HWCOM Faculty Publications

Palavras-Chave #hormonal contraceptives #HIV #Africa #Immune System Diseases #Infectious Disease #International Public Health #Medical Immunology #Medicine and Health Sciences #Obstetrics and Gynecology #Public Health #Public Health Education and Promotion #Women's Health
Tipo

text