Browsing by Author "Maeri, Irene"
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Item Gendered dimensions of population mobility associated with HIV across three epidemics in rural Eastern Africa(Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics, 2008) Camlin, Carol S.; Akullian, Adam; Neilands, Torsten B.; Getahun, Monica; Bershteyn, Anna; Ssali, Sarah; Geng, Elvin; Gandhi, Monica; Cohen, Craig R.; Maeri, Irene; Eyul, Patrick; Petersen, Maya L.; Havlir, Diane V.; Kamya, Moses R.; Bukusi, Elizabeth A.; Charlebois, Edwin D.Mobility in sub-Saharan Africa links geographically-separate HIV epidemics, intensifies transmission by enabling higher-risk sexual behavior, and disrupts care. This population-based observational cohort study measured complex dimensions of mobility in rural Uganda and Kenya. Survey data were collected every 6 months beginning in 2016 from a random sample of 2308 adults in 12 communities across three regions, stratified by intervention arm, baseline residential stability and HIV status. Analyses were survey-weighted and stratified by sex, region, and HIV status. In this study, there were large differences in the forms and magnitude of mobility across regions, between men and women, and by HIV status. We found that adult migration varied widely by region, higher proportions of men than women migrated within the past one and five years, and men predominated across all but the most localized scales of migration: a higher proportion of women than men migrated within county of origin. Labor-related mobility was more common among men than women, while women were more likely to travel for non-labor reasons. Labor-related mobility was associated with HIV positive status for both men and women, adjusting for age and region, but the association was especially pronounced in women. The forms, drivers, and correlates of mobility in eastern Africa are complex and highly gendered. An in-depth understanding of mobility may help improve implementation and address gaps in the HIV prevention and care continua.Item Pathways for reduction of HIV‐related stigma: a model derived from longitudinal qualitative research in Kenya and Uganda(John Wiley & Sons, Inc, 2020-12) Camlin, Carol S; Charlebois, Edwin D; Getahun, Monica; Akatukwasa, Cecilia; Atwine, Frederick; Itiakorit, Harriet; Bakanoma, Robert; Maeri, Irene; Owino, Lawrence; Onyango, Anjeline; Chamie, Gabriel; Clark, Tamara D; Cohen, Craig R; Kwarisiima, Dalsone; Kabami, Jane; Sang, Norton; Kamya, Moses R; Bukusi, Elizabeth A; Petersen, Maya L; V Havlir, DianeAbstract The rollout of antiretroviral therapy (ART) has been associated with reductions in HIV-related stigma, but pathways through which this reduction occurs are poorly understood. In the newer context of universal test and treat (UTT) interventions, where rapid diffusion of ART uptake takes place, there is an opportunity to understand the processes through which HIV-related stigma can decline, and how UTT strategies may precipitate more rapid and widespread changes in stigma. This qualitative study sought to evaluate how a UTT intervention influenced changes in beliefs, attitudes and behaviours related to HIV. Longitudinal qualitative in-depth semi-structured interview data were collected within a community-cluster randomized UTT trial, the Sustainable East Africa Research in Community Health (SEARCH) study, annually over three rounds (2014 to 2016) from two cohorts of adults (n = 32 community leaders, and n = 112 community members) in eight rural communities in Uganda and Kenya. Data were inductively analysed to develop new theory for understanding the pathways of stigma decline. We present an emergent theoretical model of pathways through which HIV-related stigma may decline: internalized stigma may be reduced by two processes accelerated through the uptake and successful usage of ART: first, a reduced fear of dying and increased optimism for prolonged and healthy years of life; second, a restoration of perceived social value and fulfilment of subjective role expectations via restored physical strength and productivity. Anticipated stigma may be reduced in response to widespread engagement in HIV testing, leading to an increasing number of HIV status disclosures in a community, "normalizing" disclosure and reducing fears. Improvements in the perceived quality of HIV care lead to people living with HIV (PLHIV) seeking care in nearby facilities, seeing other known community members living with HIV, reducing isolation and facilitating opportunities for social support and "solidarity." Finally, enacted stigma may be reduced in response to the community viewing the healthy bodies of PLHIV successfully engaged in treatment, which lessens the fears that trigger enacted stigma; it becomes no longer socially normative to stigmatize PLHIV. This process may be reinforced through public health messaging and anti-discrimination laws. Declines in HIV-related stigma appear to underway and explained by social processes accelerated by UTT efforts. Widespread implementation of UTT shows promise for reducing multiple dimensions of stigma, which is critical for improving health outcomes among PLHIV.Item Population mobility associated with higher risk sexual behavior in eastern African communities participating in a Universal Testing and Treatment trial(Journal of the International AIDS Society, 2018) Camlin, Carol S.; Akullian, Adam; Neilands, Torsten B.; Getahun, Monica; Eyul, Patrick; Maeri, Irene; Ssali, Sarah; Geng, Elvin; Gandhi, Monica; Cohen, Craig R.; Kamya, Moses R.; Odeny, Thomas; Bukusi, Elizabeth A.; Charlebois, Edwin D.There are significant knowledge gaps concerning complex forms of mobility emergent in sub-Saharan Africa, their relationship to sexual behaviors, HIV transmission, and how sex modifies these associations. This study, within an ongoing test-and-treat trial (SEARCH, NCT01864603), sought to measure effects of diverse metrics of mobility on behaviors, with attention to gender. Methods: Cross-sectional data were collected in 2016 from 1919 adults in 12 communities in Kenya and Uganda, to examine mobility (labor/non-labor-related travel), migration (changes of residence over geopolitical boundaries) and their associations with sexual behaviors (concurrent/higher risk partnerships), by region and sex. Multilevel mixed-effects logistic regression models, stratified by sex and adjusted for clustering by community, were fitted to examine associations of mobility with higher risk behaviors, in past 2 years/past 6 months, controlling for key covariates.