“I felt very small and embarrassed by the health care provider when I requested to be tested for syphilis”: barriers and facilitators of regular syphilis and HIV testing among female sex workers in Uganda

Abstract Background Periodic testing of female sex workers (FSW) for sexually transmitted infections (STIs) is a core component of global and national responses to achieve population-level STI elimination. We conducted a qualitative study to explore barriers and facilitators of regular syphilis and...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Richard Muhindo, Andrew Mujugira, Barbara Castelnuovo, Nelson K. Sewankambo, Rosalind Parkes-Ratanshi, Nazarius Mbona Tumwesigye, Edith Nakku-Joloba, Juliet Kiguli
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: BMC 2021
Materias:
HIV
Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/e4d5df1640684932afc95d1c692d706f
Etiquetas: Agregar Etiqueta
Sin Etiquetas, Sea el primero en etiquetar este registro!
id oai:doaj.org-article:e4d5df1640684932afc95d1c692d706f
record_format dspace
spelling oai:doaj.org-article:e4d5df1640684932afc95d1c692d706f2021-11-08T10:43:42Z“I felt very small and embarrassed by the health care provider when I requested to be tested for syphilis”: barriers and facilitators of regular syphilis and HIV testing among female sex workers in Uganda10.1186/s12889-021-12095-81471-2458https://doaj.org/article/e4d5df1640684932afc95d1c692d706f2021-11-01T00:00:00Zhttps://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-12095-8https://doaj.org/toc/1471-2458Abstract Background Periodic testing of female sex workers (FSW) for sexually transmitted infections (STIs) is a core component of global and national responses to achieve population-level STI elimination. We conducted a qualitative study to explore barriers and facilitators of regular syphilis and HIV testing among FSW in Uganda. Methods Within a quasi-experimental study among 436 FSW to assess the effect of peer education and text message reminders on uptake of regular STI and HIV testing among FSW, we conducted 48 qualitative interviews in four cities in Uganda from August–December 2018. We purposively selected FSW who tested for syphilis and HIV every 3–6 months; 12 FSW were interviewed in each city. Sex worker interviews explored: 1) reasons for periodic syphilis and HIV testing; 2) barriers and facilitators of testing; 3) experiences of testing; and 4) challenges faced while seeking testing services. Data were analyzed using thematic content analysis. Results Thematic analysis revealed individual- and health system-level barriers and facilitators of testing. For syphilis, barriers were a) interpersonal stigma, low perceived severity of syphilis and testing misconceptions (individual); and b) judgmental provider attitudes, paucity of facilities offering syphilis testing, stockouts of test kits and high cost (health system). Facilitators were c) desire to remain healthy, get married and have children, knowing the benefits of early treatment, influence of male partners/clients and normative testing behaviors (individual); and d) sex worker clinics offering dual syphilis/HIV testing (health system). For HIV, barriers included: a) internalized stigma (individual); and b) unfavorable clinic hours, stigma, discrimination, and unfriendly provider (health system). Facilitators were a) motivations to stay healthy and attract clients, habitual testing, self-efficacy, doubts about accuracy of negative test results, and use of post-exposure prophylaxis (individual); and d) availability of testing facilities (health system). Syphilis and HIV had similar testing barriers and facilitators. Conclusions HIV programs are likely to be important entry points for syphilis testing among FSW. Multi-level interventions to address testing barriers should consider focusing on these service delivery points. Extending the dual syphilis and HIV testing approach to FSW may improve testing uptake for both infections at public health facilities and decrease population-level incidence.Richard MuhindoAndrew MujugiraBarbara CastelnuovoNelson K. SewankamboRosalind Parkes-RatanshiNazarius Mbona TumwesigyeEdith Nakku-JolobaJuliet KiguliBMCarticleHIVSyphilisDual testingFemale sex workersAfricaPublic aspects of medicineRA1-1270ENBMC Public Health, Vol 21, Iss 1, Pp 1-12 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic HIV
Syphilis
Dual testing
Female sex workers
Africa
Public aspects of medicine
RA1-1270
spellingShingle HIV
Syphilis
Dual testing
Female sex workers
Africa
Public aspects of medicine
RA1-1270
Richard Muhindo
Andrew Mujugira
Barbara Castelnuovo
Nelson K. Sewankambo
Rosalind Parkes-Ratanshi
Nazarius Mbona Tumwesigye
Edith Nakku-Joloba
Juliet Kiguli
“I felt very small and embarrassed by the health care provider when I requested to be tested for syphilis”: barriers and facilitators of regular syphilis and HIV testing among female sex workers in Uganda
description Abstract Background Periodic testing of female sex workers (FSW) for sexually transmitted infections (STIs) is a core component of global and national responses to achieve population-level STI elimination. We conducted a qualitative study to explore barriers and facilitators of regular syphilis and HIV testing among FSW in Uganda. Methods Within a quasi-experimental study among 436 FSW to assess the effect of peer education and text message reminders on uptake of regular STI and HIV testing among FSW, we conducted 48 qualitative interviews in four cities in Uganda from August–December 2018. We purposively selected FSW who tested for syphilis and HIV every 3–6 months; 12 FSW were interviewed in each city. Sex worker interviews explored: 1) reasons for periodic syphilis and HIV testing; 2) barriers and facilitators of testing; 3) experiences of testing; and 4) challenges faced while seeking testing services. Data were analyzed using thematic content analysis. Results Thematic analysis revealed individual- and health system-level barriers and facilitators of testing. For syphilis, barriers were a) interpersonal stigma, low perceived severity of syphilis and testing misconceptions (individual); and b) judgmental provider attitudes, paucity of facilities offering syphilis testing, stockouts of test kits and high cost (health system). Facilitators were c) desire to remain healthy, get married and have children, knowing the benefits of early treatment, influence of male partners/clients and normative testing behaviors (individual); and d) sex worker clinics offering dual syphilis/HIV testing (health system). For HIV, barriers included: a) internalized stigma (individual); and b) unfavorable clinic hours, stigma, discrimination, and unfriendly provider (health system). Facilitators were a) motivations to stay healthy and attract clients, habitual testing, self-efficacy, doubts about accuracy of negative test results, and use of post-exposure prophylaxis (individual); and d) availability of testing facilities (health system). Syphilis and HIV had similar testing barriers and facilitators. Conclusions HIV programs are likely to be important entry points for syphilis testing among FSW. Multi-level interventions to address testing barriers should consider focusing on these service delivery points. Extending the dual syphilis and HIV testing approach to FSW may improve testing uptake for both infections at public health facilities and decrease population-level incidence.
format article
author Richard Muhindo
Andrew Mujugira
Barbara Castelnuovo
Nelson K. Sewankambo
Rosalind Parkes-Ratanshi
Nazarius Mbona Tumwesigye
Edith Nakku-Joloba
Juliet Kiguli
author_facet Richard Muhindo
Andrew Mujugira
Barbara Castelnuovo
Nelson K. Sewankambo
Rosalind Parkes-Ratanshi
Nazarius Mbona Tumwesigye
Edith Nakku-Joloba
Juliet Kiguli
author_sort Richard Muhindo
title “I felt very small and embarrassed by the health care provider when I requested to be tested for syphilis”: barriers and facilitators of regular syphilis and HIV testing among female sex workers in Uganda
title_short “I felt very small and embarrassed by the health care provider when I requested to be tested for syphilis”: barriers and facilitators of regular syphilis and HIV testing among female sex workers in Uganda
title_full “I felt very small and embarrassed by the health care provider when I requested to be tested for syphilis”: barriers and facilitators of regular syphilis and HIV testing among female sex workers in Uganda
title_fullStr “I felt very small and embarrassed by the health care provider when I requested to be tested for syphilis”: barriers and facilitators of regular syphilis and HIV testing among female sex workers in Uganda
title_full_unstemmed “I felt very small and embarrassed by the health care provider when I requested to be tested for syphilis”: barriers and facilitators of regular syphilis and HIV testing among female sex workers in Uganda
title_sort “i felt very small and embarrassed by the health care provider when i requested to be tested for syphilis”: barriers and facilitators of regular syphilis and hiv testing among female sex workers in uganda
publisher BMC
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/e4d5df1640684932afc95d1c692d706f
work_keys_str_mv AT richardmuhindo ifeltverysmallandembarrassedbythehealthcareproviderwhenirequestedtobetestedforsyphilisbarriersandfacilitatorsofregularsyphilisandhivtestingamongfemalesexworkersinuganda
AT andrewmujugira ifeltverysmallandembarrassedbythehealthcareproviderwhenirequestedtobetestedforsyphilisbarriersandfacilitatorsofregularsyphilisandhivtestingamongfemalesexworkersinuganda
AT barbaracastelnuovo ifeltverysmallandembarrassedbythehealthcareproviderwhenirequestedtobetestedforsyphilisbarriersandfacilitatorsofregularsyphilisandhivtestingamongfemalesexworkersinuganda
AT nelsonksewankambo ifeltverysmallandembarrassedbythehealthcareproviderwhenirequestedtobetestedforsyphilisbarriersandfacilitatorsofregularsyphilisandhivtestingamongfemalesexworkersinuganda
AT rosalindparkesratanshi ifeltverysmallandembarrassedbythehealthcareproviderwhenirequestedtobetestedforsyphilisbarriersandfacilitatorsofregularsyphilisandhivtestingamongfemalesexworkersinuganda
AT nazariusmbonatumwesigye ifeltverysmallandembarrassedbythehealthcareproviderwhenirequestedtobetestedforsyphilisbarriersandfacilitatorsofregularsyphilisandhivtestingamongfemalesexworkersinuganda
AT edithnakkujoloba ifeltverysmallandembarrassedbythehealthcareproviderwhenirequestedtobetestedforsyphilisbarriersandfacilitatorsofregularsyphilisandhivtestingamongfemalesexworkersinuganda
AT julietkiguli ifeltverysmallandembarrassedbythehealthcareproviderwhenirequestedtobetestedforsyphilisbarriersandfacilitatorsofregularsyphilisandhivtestingamongfemalesexworkersinuganda
_version_ 1718442765306560512