Fertility Desires and its Predictors among Persons Living with HIV in a Secondary Health Facility in Northcentral Nigeria

J Glob Infect Dis. 2022 Aug 26;14(3):106-111. doi: 10.4103/jgid.jgid_6_22. eCollection 2022 Jul-Sep.

Abstract

Introduction: Among people living with HIV (PLHIV), fertility desire which is the desire to have more children is increasing due to the improvement in quality of life and survival resulting from anti-retroviral treatment and also improved sexual and reproductive health services. Fertility desires can result in increased risk of HIV transmission, especially in unprotected heterosexual intercourse. There is limited information regarding the fertility desires and predictors among PLHIV in our environment.

Methods: This study was aimed at assessing the fertility desires and predictors in PLHIV in Northcentral Nigeria. Study was descriptive cross-sectional. Semi-structured interviewer administered pretested questionnaires was used to get information from 170 PLHIV accessing care in a secondary health-care facility selected by the systematic sampling technique. Data were analyzed using the SPSS software version 23.0. At 95% confidence interval (CI), a P < 0.05 was considered to be statistically significant. Chi-square and logistic regression.

Results: Fertility desire was found among 64.1% of the respondents. Younger age (odds ratio [OR] = 0.2270; 95% CI = 0.0662-0.7791, P = 0.0184), having no child or a smaller number of children (OR = 0.0432; CI = 0.0046-0.4050; P = 0.0059) and suppressed viral loads (OR = 4.1069; CI = 1.1650-14.4784; P = 0.0280) were the predictors for fertility desire.

Conclusion: This study showed that PLHIV had high fertility desires but do not know any safe method of conception, hence intensified effort should be made by primary care providers and other health-care workers to include sexual and reproductive health counselling during routine HIV clinic visits to enable PLHIV make informed decision about their fertility desires.

Keywords: Antiretroviral treatment; HIV infection; Nigeria; PLHIV; fertility desire; health-care workers; predictors; reproductive health.