HIV prevalence and associated factors among married women, Mozambique, 2015: analysis of the 2015 National AIDS Indicator Survey (IMASIDA)
Samuel Nuvunga, Denise Chitsondzo Langa, Jahit Sacarlal, Erika Rossetto, Cynthia Semá Baltazar

TL;DR
This study analyzed HIV prevalence among married women in Mozambique and identified factors like age, education, and domestic violence that increase the risk of HIV.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into sociodemographic and behavioral factors associated with HIV among married women in Mozambique.
Findings
HIV prevalence was higher among married women aged 35-49 years.
Women with lower education levels had significantly higher odds of HIV.
Domestic violence and multiple sexual partners were associated with increased HIV risk.
Abstract
epidemiological estimates from the 2021 Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) emphasize the existing gender disparities, where women face a higher risk of HIV/AIDS exposure. In Mozambique, as of 2021, the HIV prevalence rate among the adult population stood at 12.5%, with an even more concerning rate of 15.4% among women of reproductive age. a cross-sectional study was carried out with secondary data from the Survey on National Indicators of Vaccination, Malaria, and HIV/AIDS (IMASIDA 2015), where we included married women, both civil marriage and common law marriage of reproductive age 15-49 years. Statistical analyses, including chi-squared tests and logistic regression models, accounting for survey design, were employed to assess associations. the study findings showed that HIV prevalence was higher among married women aged 35-49 years (aOR=2.5; 95% CI: 1.3-4.6;…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health · HIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · HIV/AIDS Impact and Responses
