Declining HIV prevalence and incidence in perinatal women in Harare, Zimbabwe

John W Hargrove, Jean H Humphrey, Agnes Mahomva, Brian G Williams, Henry Chidawanyika, Kuda Mutasa, Edmore Marinda, Michael T Mbizvo, Kusum J Nathoo, Peter J Iliff, Owen Mugurungi, ZVITAMBO Study Group, John W Hargrove, Jean H Humphrey, Agnes Mahomva, Brian G Williams, Henry Chidawanyika, Kuda Mutasa, Edmore Marinda, Michael T Mbizvo, Kusum J Nathoo, Peter J Iliff, Owen Mugurungi, ZVITAMBO Study Group

Abstract

Background: In several recent papers it has been suggested that HIV prevalence and incidence are declining in Zimbabwe as a result of changing sexual behavior. We provide further support for these suggestions, based on an analysis of more extensive, age-stratified, HIV prevalence data from 1990 to 2009 for perinatal women in Harare, as well as data on incidence and mortality.

Methodology/principal findings: Pooled prevalence, incidence and mortality were fitted using a simple susceptible-infected (SI) model of HIV transmission; age-stratified prevalence data were fitted using double-logistic functions. We estimate that incidence peaked at 5.5% per year in 1991 declining to 1% per year in 2010. Prevalence peaked in 1998/9 [35.9% (CI95: 31.3-40.7)] and decreased by 67% to 11.9% (CI95: 10.1-13.8) in 2009. For women <20y, 20-24y, 25-29y, 30-34y and ≥35y, prevalence peaked at 25.4%, 34.2%, 47.1%, 44.0% and 33.5% in 1993, 1996, 1997, 1998 and 1999, respectively, declining thereafter in every age group. Among women <25y, prevalence peaked in 1994 at 28.8% declining thereafter by 69% to 8.9% (CI95: 6.8-11.5) in 2009.

Conclusion/significance: HIV prevalence declined substantially among perinatal women in Harare after 1998 consequent upon a decline in incidence starting in the early 1990s. Our model suggests that this was primarily a result of changes in behavior which we attribute to a general increase in awareness of the dangers of AIDS and the ever more apparent increases in mortality.

Copyright © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Source: PubMed

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