Systematic review of couple-based HIV intervention and prevention studies: advantages, gaps, and future directions

Tina Jiwatram-Negrón, Nabila El-Bassel, Tina Jiwatram-Negrón, Nabila El-Bassel

Abstract

We conducted a systematic review of couple-based HIV biobehavioral (skills-building, VCT, and adherence) and biomedical (ART, circumcision) prevention and intervention studies designed to reduce sexual- and drug-risk behaviors and HIV transmission and acquisition. Of the 11,162 papers identified in the search, 93 peer-reviewed papers met the inclusion criteria and yielded a total of 33 studies conducted globally. Biobehavioral couple-based prevention and intervention studies have been efficacious in reducing sexual- and drug-risk behaviors, increasing access to HIV testing and care, and improving adherence. Biomedical couple-based studies were found to reduce HIV incidence among HIV-negative sex partners and viral load among HIV-positive partners. Despite much progress, couple-based HIV prevention and intervention studies remain limited; a number of methodological gaps exist and studies focusing on MSM, people who inject drugs, and sex workers are scarce.

Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of interest

The authors have no conflicts of interest.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Flow diagram of systematic review search process

Source: PubMed

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