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Effect of a ‘diagonal’ intervention on uptake of HIV and reproductive health services by female sex workers in three sub‐Saharan African cities
Author(s) -
Lafort Yves,
Greener Letitia,
Lessitala Faustino,
Chabeda Sophie,
Greener Ross,
Beksinska Mags,
Gichangi Peter,
Griffin Sally,
Smit Jenni A.,
Chersich Matthew,
Delva Wim
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
tropical medicine and international health
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.056
H-Index - 114
eISSN - 1365-3156
pISSN - 1360-2276
DOI - 10.1111/tmi.13072
Subject(s) - reproductive health , psychological intervention , context (archaeology) , respondent , medicine , logistic regression , environmental health , demography , sex work , population , socioeconomics , developing country , geography , human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) , nursing , family medicine , economic growth , sociology , political science , archaeology , law , economics
Objectives To enhance uptake of sexual and reproductive health ( SRH ) services by female sex workers ( FSW s), we conducted an implementation study in which we piloted and tested context‐specific ‘diagonal’ interventions, combining vertical, targeted interventions with horizontally improved access to the general health services, in three cities in sub‐Saharan Africa. Methods We collected indicators of SRH service uptake through face‐to‐face interviews with approximately 400 FSW s, pre‐ and post‐intervention, in Durban, South Africa; Tete, Mozambique; and Mombasa, Kenya, recruited by respondent‐driven sampling. Changes in uptake were tested for their statistical significance using multivariate logistic regression models. Results In all cities, overall uptake of services increased. Having used all services for contraception, STI care, HIV testing, HIV care, cervical cancer screening and sexual violence, if needed, increased from 12.5% to 41.5% in Durban, 25.0% to 40.1% in Tete and 44.9% to 69.1% in Mombasa. Across cities, the effect was greatest in having been tested for HIV in the past six months which increased from 40.9% to 83.2% in Durban, 56.0% to 76.6% in Tete and 70.9% to 87.6% in Mombasa. In Tete and Mombasa, rise in SRH service use was almost entirely due to a greater uptake of targeted services. Only in Durban was there additionally an increase in the utilisation of general health services. Conclusion SRH service utilisation improved in the short‐term in three different sub‐Saharan African contexts, primarily through vertical, targeted components. The long‐term effectiveness of diagonal approaches, in particular on the use of general, horizontal health services, needs further investigation.

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