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ORIGINAL ARTICLE
KNOWLEDGE, ATTITUDES AND PERSONAL BELIEFS ABOUT HIV AND AIDS AMONG MENTALLY ILL PATIENTS IN SOWETO, JOHANNESBURG
G Jonsson, MB ChB, DMH (SA), FCPsych (SA), MMed (Psych)
M Y H Moosa, MB ChB, FCPsych (SA) MMed (Psych)
F Y Jeenah, MB ChB, MMed (Psych), FCPsych (SA)
Luthando Psychiatric HIV Clinic, Chris Hani
Baragwanath Hospital, Division of Psychiatry, University of
Witwatersrand, Johannesburg
Aim. The aim of the study was to determine
knowledge, attitudes and personal beliefs regarding HIV and AIDS in a
group of mentally ill patients attending outpatient clinics in Soweto,
Johannesburg.
Method. All patients attending four
randomly chosen clinics in Soweto were invited to complete a
self-administered questionnaire after obtaining informed written
consent. The 63-item questionnaire, developed from others specifically
for this study, included questions on socio-demographic and clinical
characteristics; knowledge on how HIV is acquired and spread; attitudes
and beliefs regarding HIV and AIDS; and condom usage. The statements in
the knowledge sections were used to calculate a composite score, which
if greater than or equal to 75% was defined as ‘adequate
knowledge’.
Results. A total of 1 151 patients with
mental illness participated in the study. The mean age was 41.9 years
(standard deviation 11.6) and the majority were males (50%); single
(55%), and had achieved only a secondary level of education (53.3%).
Overall, most of the study population did not believe in the myths
surrounding the spread and acquisition of HIV and AIDS. There were
however, significant associations between a low level of education and
the belief that HIV is acquired from mosquito bites (odds ratio (OR)
1.61; 95% CI 1.19 - 2.18; p=0.002) and through masturbation or body rubbing (OR 1.76; 95% CI 1.34 - 2.33; p=0.000).
Although more than 90% of the patients were aware of the facts
regarding the spread of HIV, approximately 40% did not believe that one
could acquire HIV through a single sexual encounter. The composite
scoring for knowledge showed that less than half the patients had
adequate knowledge of HIV/AIDS. This was significantly associated with
gender and level of education: females were 1.6 times (p<0.0004) and patients with Grade 8 or higher education 1.5 times more knowledgeable (p=0.002).
Conclusion. Among mentally ill patients
there is both a lack of knowledge about most aspects of HIV and AIDS
and a belief in some of the myths associated with the acquisition and
spread of the disease, especially among older, less educated patients.
It is imperative that a targeted strategy be developed for this
vulnerable group, taking into cognisance their inherent lower level of
education and the cognitive impairment associated with mental illness,
to educate them on all aspects of HIV and AIDS and to improve access to
services.
The prevalence of HIV in developed countries is higher among patients with mental illness than among those without.1 In the USA it is estimated to be 13 - 76 times that of the general population.2 In
southern Africa the prevalence ranges from 0% to 59% (0 - 22.9% before
1996 and 2.6 - 59% after 1996, suggesting an upward trend).3 The prevalence also varies according to where the study was performed, the highest being in Zimbabwe.4 Collins et al.
more recently reported that in South Africa, despite the supposition
that people with mental illness may engage in high-risk sexual
behaviours more than the general population, the prevalence largely
matches that of the general population.5
They suggest that as there is little injection drug use, the high
prevalence of HIV in the general population is probably due to
acquisition of the virus shortly after sexual initiation.5 Nonetheless, there is sufficient evidence that mental illness increases the individual’s vulnerability to HIV infection.6
,
7
HIV risk among people with mental illness has been associated with lack
of condom use, multiple sexual partners and injection drug use.8
,
9
The social exclusion that often accompanies life with mental illness
may also increase vulnerability to infection. It may lead to exchange
of sex for money or goods and an increase in coercive sexual
encounters. In addition, cognitive deficits associated with certain
mental disorders may impair judgement and the ability to negotiate safe
sexual encounters.10
In the general population, education and providing information about
HIV and AIDS is one of the important ways of reducing risky sexual
behaviour and the spread of the disease.11
Yet studies have shown that levels of knowledge about HIV and AIDS are
sub-optimal among patients with mental illness, and that levels differ
among inpatients and outpatients and are influenced by psychiatric
diagnosis.12
Patients with mental illness tend to engage in risky sexual behaviour
because of these lower levels of knowledge, which places them at risk
of contracting or transmitting HIV.1
,
3
,
14 Melo et al.
found in their study that high HIV and AIDS knowledge scores were
associated with a past history of sexually transmitted infections,
previous HIV testing and consistent condom use and that low knowledge
scores were associated with mental illness.11
Similarly, a study in a psychiatric hospital in Rio de Janeiro also
showed knowledge to be lower in patients with mental illness compared
with the general population.15 The authors used a 17-item AIDS knowledge test and found the average correct score to be only 61.2%. Chandra et al.,
who assessed HIV knowledge among a group of Indian patients with mental
illness at baseline and 5 days later after an HIV risk reduction
programme, showed that brief HIV-focused educational intervention can
improve knowledge.16
However, different methodologies employed in the various studies make
it difficult to ascertain accurate knowledge among psychiatric
patients.
In spite of evidence showing poor knowledge of HIV and AIDS among
mentally ill patients and the risks thereof, very few mental health
services routinely assess knowledge of HIV transmission and risk
behaviour,1
,
13
let alone attempt to educate this vulnerable group of individuals. HIV
risk reduction interventions targeting South Africans with psychiatric
illness remain few and far between. Collins examined the attitudes of
46 mental health care providers in four provinces of South Africa and
reported that ‘personal, contextual and political factors in the
clinic and the hospital create barriers to integrating prevention
activities. In particular, providers face at least three challenges to
intervening in the epidemic among their patients: their own views of
psychiatric illness, the transitions occurring in the mental health
care system, and shifting social attitudes toward sexuality.’17
Although barriers exist in implementing such education programmes, the
Mental Health Care Act No. 17 of 2002 requires the integration of all
prevention and promotion programmes into psychiatric services.18 This is supported by research that shows it to be implementable.1
,
19
Hodgson stated that: ‘HIV for many South Africans defies
precise classification: it does not fit the profile of a
‘normal’ disease. It affects the developed and the
developing world in different ways and has a long period of apparent
inactivity, and any of a large number of symptoms can present as the
immune system weakens. This is further complicated by the association
of HIV with sex, death, taboo and youth. It is therefore not surprising
that people depend upon cultural models of illness, constructed from
existing mythical frameworks and illness narratives, to provide meaning
and to guide behaviour.’20
Some prevalent cultural norms and beliefs include negative attitudes
towards condoms (‘flesh-to-flesh’ sex is equated with
masculinity and is necessary for male health); engaging in dry sex (the
vagina is expected to be small and dry); the importance of fertility
(which may hinder the practice of safer sex); polygamy (males are
biologically programmed to need sex with more than one woman);
misconceptions regarding the virus (that it can be contracted by
sharing food, or mosquito bites; that sex with a virgin can cure the
disease); that circumcised men cannot contract HIV; that alcohol kills
HIV in the blood; and that you cannot contract HIV if you have one
unprotected sexual encounter.21
The assessment of knowledge deficits will help in determining which
patients need knowledge interventions as opposed to which need skills
development or motivational behaviour change,11
hence the need for this study, the aim of which was to determine
baseline knowledge about prevention and acquisition of HIV among
mentally ill patients in Soweto. It was hoped that the information
obtained from this study would assist in developing protocols,
guidelines and focused interventions to improve the level of knowledge
and reduce the risk of spread of HIV among people with mental illness.
Method
The study design was cross-sectional in nature and undertaken to
determine the knowledge, attitudes and personal beliefs among patients
attending specialist psychiatric clinics in Soweto, Gauteng, from April
2009 to June 2009. There are 8 specialist psychiatry clinics in Soweto,
of which 4 were randomly selected from a hat containing the names of
all the clinics. Patients (18 years and older) from these four randomly
chosen psychiatric clinics were approached to participate in the study
in the waiting room while they were waiting to see the psychiatrist.
Informed consent was obtained after the contents of the form had been
explained to the patients. Although the questionnaire was
self-administered, a trained facilitator assisted patients where
translation or explanation of the questions was necessary. The study
was approved by the Human Research Ethics Committee of the University
of the Witwatersrand.
There is no specific questionnaire that is validated to assess
knowledge, attitude and personal beliefs in mentally ill patients in
South Africa. For the purpose of this study, questions from other
validated questionnaires for the general population were used to
construct our 63-item questionnaire.22
We included questions on knowledge, attitudes and beliefs that were
commonly recurring. Although not performed on mentally ill patients,
the questions were general and appeared appropriate to be used in our
study on mentally ill patients. The final questionnaire comprised of
nine sub-sections; however the sub-sections analysed in this report
were those on socio-demographic and clinical characteristics; knowledge
on the acquisition and spread of HIV and AIDS; attitudes and beliefs
regarding HIV and AIDS; and condom usage. The questions were rephrased
where they might have been confusing, were not positively or negatively
worded so as to prevent a set response bias, and attempted to take into
consideration the cultural beliefs and norms of the participants so as
not to appear offensive. The questions were in English and not
translated into any of the official African languages. Reliability was
ensured by having one facilitator and one interviewer, who was a nurse
mental health practitioner with 30 years’ experience.
Knowledge scores for the various categories were coded as 1 for a
correct response and 0 for an incorrect or unknown response. A
composite score was derived for each of the categories. A patient who
achieved a composite score greater than or equal to 75% was defined as
having ‘adequate knowledge’. Nachega et al. used a similar technique in their study to determine average knowledge scores.23
Kuder Richardson (KR20) reliability coefficients were calculated for
the questions pertaining to knowledge of HIV and AIDS (0.6591),
prevention of acquiring HIV (0.0464), mental illness and HIV
association (0.5832), and all questions (0.7428).24
Descriptive statistics, frequency distribution tables and chi-square
tests for categorical data were produced using Stata (Stata Statistical
Software, Release 10).25
Results
A total of 1 151 patients (50% males, 43.1% females, 6.9% unknown)
with mental illness completed the self-administered questionnaire.
Typical diagnoses seen at the community clinics comprise mood disorders
(both unipolar and bipolar disorders), psychotic disorders, anxiety
disorders, personality disorders and disorders due to general medical
conditions. The numbers of patients approached and those refusing to
participate in the study were unfortunately not recorded. Approximately
79% of patients were in the age group 25 - 54 years. Patients between
the ages of 15 and 24 years and those over 55 years accounted for 6.1%
and 15.4%, respectively. The mean age of the entire study population
was 41.9 years (standard deviation 11.6), while that for males was 39.5
years and that for females 44.1 years. Female patients were
significantly older (p<0.001,
two-sample Wilcoxon rank-sum test). Marital status was as follows:
single (55.2%), married or living together (21.6%), divorced or
separated (13.1%), and widowed (8.1%). Most of the patients had some
formal education: Grades 1 - 7 in 38.8%, Grades 8 - 12 in 55.3%, and
tertiary education in 3.2%. Only 80 patients (7%) were employed and 918
(79.7%) were receiving a grant (disability or pension); 499 patients
(43.4%) had a positive family history of mental illness. More than half
the patients (54.6%) were unaware of the details of their own current
psychiatric illness. Common psychiatric diagnoses included depression
(8.2%), bipolar disorder (17.3) and schizophrenia (18.9%).
Ninety-three per cent of the study population was aware that AIDS is
caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Although only 2.26%
responded that HIV and AIDS was a result of being bewitched, the
majority (87%) were unsure, as they did not complete this question.
Overall, most of the study population did not believe in the myths
surrounding the spread and acquisition of HIV and AIDS. However, a
significantly large number believed that sharing utensils (86.7%),
masturbation or body rubbing (65.4%), and a bite from a mosquito that
has bitten someone with HIV (72.3%) leads to the spread of HIV (Table
I). Although more than 90% of
the patients were aware of facts relating to the spread of HIV,
approximately 40% did not believe that one could acquire HIV through a
single sexual encounter.
There were significant associations between
having a Grade 8 or higher level of education and the belief that HIV
is acquired from mosquito bites (odds ratio (OR) 1.61; 95% confidence
interval (CI) 1.19 - 2.18; p=0.002) or through masturbation or body rubbing (OR 1.76; 95% CI 1.34 - 2.33; p=0.000), and that there is no hope for people with HIV and mental illness (OR 4.133; 95% CI 2.00 - 8.50; p=0.000).
Similarly, there were significant associations between advancing age
and the belief that HIV is acquired through masturbation or body
rubbing (OR 1.12; 95% CI 0.85 - 1.46; p=0.001) and that there is no hope for people with HIV and mental illness (OR 0.961; 95% CI=0.93 - 0.98; p=0.002).
With regard to attitudes towards condom use, only
half of the patients believed that the condom completely protects one
from contracting HIV. Despite more than 90% of the patients reporting
that they did not experience difficulty in obtaining condoms at clinics
and believed that condoms did not decrease the full enjoyment of sex,
only 70% of the patients reported that they used condoms with every
partner they had sexual intercourse with (Table II). The majority of
the patients reported that they engaged in safe sex practices.
Ten per cent (N=197) of the patients reported risky sexual behaviour, the reasons cited being lack of information about safe sex (N=112), lack of skills in dealing with provocative situations (N=77), because they were in hospital (N=1), no social support (N=2), actively using drugs and alcohol (N=3), and exchange sex, i.e. for cigarettes, a place to live or drugs (N=2).
Using the composite scoring for knowledge
described in the methodology, the results showed that 49% of the
patients had adequate knowledge of HIV/AIDS and that 42% had adequate
knowledge pertaining to the prevention of acquiring HIV (Table III).
The patients’ limited knowledge of HIV and AIDS was largely
obtained from radio and television (12.7%), friends and relatives
(6.2%), health care workers (5.5%), public speeches (0.4%), newspapers
or magazines (0.5%), church (0.9%) and school (1.7%). However, a large
majority of patients did not respond to this question.
Adequate knowledge about HIV and AIDS was
significantly associated with gender, females being 1.6 times more
knowledgeable than males (p<0.0004),
and a higher level of education, patients with grade 8 or higher of
education being 1.5 times more knowledgeable than those with less
education (p=0.002). After controlling for
age, gender and educational level, the results from multivariate
logistic regression analysis showed similar associations to the
unadjusted ORs.
Discussion
Various studies have shown that a large
proportion of patients with mental illness engage in behaviours that
place them at high risk of contracting HIV, e.g. promiscuity,
intravenous drug use with shared needles, and unprotected sex.2
,
14
,
26
Although clinical factors such as poor reality perception, affective
instability and impulsiveness play a major role in such behaviours,
lack of knowledge and/or inaccurate information about HIV infection is
also a significant variable.26
Published studies in developed countries conclude
that knowledge about HIV and AIDS is poorer in mentally ill patients
than the general population.27
Yet other studies, in a variety of psychiatric patient groups, reported
higher proportions of correct responses to AIDS knowledge
questionnaires, ranging from 63% to 80% 30 (comparable to that of the general US population).33 Chuang
and Atkinson at the Calgary Community Mental Health Clinic utilised a
10-item instrument to assess knowledge about HIV and AIDS.30 Chandra et al. in India reported a low 34% accuracy in responses to questions on HIV and AIDS.16
We utilised a 63-item questionnaire and found that approximately 50% of
the mentally ill patients surveyed had adequate knowledge of HIV and
AIDS. While this level of knowledge is not the lowest reported among
mentally ill patients, it is significantly lower than that of the
general population, and specifically the Soweto population. Nachega et al.
in their cross-sectional study of 105 HIV-infected adults attending an
HIV clinic in Soweto reported that 89% had good knowledge about the
cause of HIV infection and 83% knew about modes of transmission.23 Similarly,
the 2003 South African Demographic and Health Survey (SADHS), conducted
on the general population, showed that 93 - 95% had heard of AIDS, 71 -
85% agreed that condoms reduce the risk of HIV infection, and 78%
agreed with the statement that a healthy-looking person could be
carrying HIV.34 These studies support a better level of knowledge than that of mentally ill patients.
The most likely reason for low levels of
knowledge is the very few education programmes specifically designed
for patients with mental illness and conducted in mental health
clinics, where the targeted group would be most accessible. Kloos et al.
found that only a little more than half of their enrolled patients
reported receiving HIV-related education, which was limited to brief
one-time group overviews of HIV/AIDS.35 Further,
they report that education in groups is difficult because needs and
levels of functioning vary widely within the different sub-groups of
mental illness.35
Other factors that influence levels of knowledge include age, gender
and level of education. These individual factors are more significantly
associated with improved knowledge rather than treatment setting
factors and condom distribution.11 Our study found that female patients and patients with higher level of education (Grade 8 and higher) were relatively more knowledgeable about HIV and AIDS. This is in contrast to Chandra et al.’s finding16 that men demonstrated better knowledge, and the Katz study,36
which reported no gender difference in knowledge, either for total
knowledge scores or for scores on individual items. It is likely that
the bias towards females in this study may be because in general
females tend to be better utilisers of health facilities (including
antenatal clinics), where they access education and improve knowledge,
while men are notoriously known to shy away from and avoid health
facilities.37
,
38
With regard to education, several studies have also reported that
higher levels of education lower the risk of being HIV-positive and
that educated individuals are more responsive to the HIV/AIDS
information campaigns and condom use.11
,
39
,
40 Koen et al. reported that negative symptoms associated with mental illness also impact on acquisition of knowledge.41
The participants in our study obtained their
limited knowledge of HIV and AIDS mainly from radio and television,
friends and relatives, and to a much lesser extent from health care
workers. This is similar to Nigerian studies, which also found that the
main source of information on HIV was electronic media (radio and
television).22
,
42
Health care providers/institutions are significantly lacking as a
source of information despite having the opportunity and having most
contact with mentally ill patients. Education of the mentally ill must
utilise all available modalities. The Vision Project, although not
directed at patients with mental illness, showed that individuals with
high programme exposure were one and a half times more likely than
those with no exposure to have discussed AIDS with their partner and
over twice as likely to know that condom use can reduce the risk of HIV
infection.43 Similar outcomes were reported in India by Chandra et al.,
whose patients received an HIV educational programme and were then
re-assessed for their knowledge 1 and 5 days later. The results
indicated a poor level of baseline knowledge, which improved after
education; knowledge gains were sustained at 5 days.16
There is strong evidence to support the recommendation that mental
health practitioners should develop specific training programmes aimed
at increasing knowledge among the mentally ill. These programmes must
take into cognisance the lower level of education and cognitive
impairment among mentally ill patients and should be incorporated not
only in health facilities but also in the print media and the radio.
While education is important, misinformation,
myths and urban legends have been found to be associated with higher
rates of HIV risk behaviours (impulsivity, increased sexual activity,
poor skills at negotiating safe sex and drug abuse) among mentally ill
patients.19 Approximately
1 in 10 patients in our study engaged in risky sexual behaviour,
largely because of lack of information or misinformation. One in 5 of
our participants believed that a shower after sex prevented one from
contracting HIV. This was similar to figures in studies by Koen et al.
41 and Chandra et al.
16 Katz et al. reported that 42% of their subjects were unaware that they could be infected by injection drug use.36 Otto-Salaj et al. reported that 48% of their subjects believed that careful cleansing after sex would provide protection from the virus,32 and Kalichman et al. that 37% of their patients believed that showering after sex would prevent HIV infection.19
In the study by Chuang and Atkinson, a significant number of subjects
believed that one could acquire AIDS by donating blood and 25% did not
think that having only one unsafe sexual contact would make them
vulnerable to HIV infection.30
In our study, a much higher proportion (40%) of respondents believed
that one could not acquire HIV after just one sexual contact. The
majority also believed that sharing utensils (86.7%) and masturbation
or body rubbing (65.4%) leads to the acquisition of HIV. More than
two-thirds of the respondents held the belief that that HIV can be
acquired from the bite of a mosquito. In a Nigerian study, only 23.5%
of patients held this belief,42 while only 57% in the SADHS rejected the statement that HIV cannot be transmitted by mosquito bites.34
Our study also found significant associations between the frequency of
some of these beliefs and a Grade 8 or lower level of education and
advancing age.
Only half of our patients believed that condoms
completely protect one from contracting HIV, and 90% believed that
condoms do not decrease the full enjoyment of sex. Despite this, 14.6%
of the participants did not use condoms with every partner they had
sexual intercourse with and would not insist that either they or their
partners wear condoms. This compares favourably with the SADHS study,
in which 76% of men knew that using condoms and having sex with one
uninfected partner prevents HIV, while only 68% of women knew this.34
Bonhert et al.
reported that while misinformation and myths may be associated with
negative attitudes towards condoms and a greater number of sex
partners, holding these beliefs was not an impediment to HIV testing or
increased risk behaviour.44
While the majority of our patients were aware
that AIDS was caused by HIV, 1 out of 10 patients believed that it was
caused by bewitchment. In comparison, in the SADHS 76% of women
surveyed agreed that HIV could not be transmitted by witchcraft.34
Witchcraft or invisible forces have long been thought of in Africa as
causing untimely death or illness. In the South African context this is
often seen as malicious individuals using spiritual entities or
‘muti’ to effect harm on another person. Jealousy is
thought to be the main reason why a malicious lover, neighbour or
relative would want to harm a particular individual. Of equal concern
is the fact that 24% of our patients responded that they used
additional protective measures from traditional healers to guard
themselves against the acquisition of HIV. In a study among inmates
(not reported as having mental illness) of Quthiing Prison in Lesotho,
2.1% of respondents interviewed thought that HIV was caused by
bewitchment and 23% believed that traditional protective measures
against witchcraft may prevent the transmission of HIV/AIDS.22
Efforts to combat HIV/AIDS in prevention campaigns need to include
tackling cultural beliefs and not just provide information on cause and
transmission. Understanding these cultural beliefs is important, as
they influence decision making concerning choice of therapy. In these
cases, hospitals or clinics are only approached for help as a last
resort when traditional therapies have failed. It is then often too
late for biomedical treatments to be effective. We also need to extend
this information to what symptoms suggest infection and how to respond
to those symptoms.45
It is these gaps in our prevention programmes that continue to
facilitate infection, as misinformation about AIDS leads to high-risk
behaviours.36
A few limitations to this study are worth noting.
Although diagnosis was not correlated with clinical records and no
measure of level of severity of psychiatric illness at the time of the
interview was made, reliability was ensured by having one facilitator
and one interviewer who was a nurse mental health practitioner with 30
years’ experience. Our sample was also predominantly urban and
hence may not be generalisable to other study populations. The
self-report nature, although facilitated, might have caused bias that
might have led to over- or under-estimation of certain variables.
Similarly, a minimum level of literacy was required that may have
biased the sample towards higher functioning and more literate
respondents. Our questionnaire has not been validated in mentally ill
patients or in a developing country and may have been too lengthy.
Further work is required to explore and improve the psychometric
properties of this questionnaire, and to develop preventive programmes
and means to assess whether such programmes work in terms of retained
knowledge and behavioural change. Sexual risk behaviour was not
analysed in this research study, but is the basis of a future report.
Conclusion
Given the relatively high prevalence of both
mental illness and HIV/AIDS in our general population, there is a
proportion of patients with mental illness who lack knowledge about HIV
and AIDS. Comprehensive basic information and medical facts concerning
the acquisition, prevention and further transmission of HIV are needed.
Promotion of HIV testing and counselling of psychiatric patients and
their families is needed and should further enable this group to
receive appropriate psychological support. The uninfected segment of
the mentally ill population should have adequate knowledge about how to
protect themselves against this devastating disease. Knowledge of HIV
status, with appropriate counselling, may mean that these individuals
can change risk behaviour to protect their quality of life and that of
their families. Prevention activities should include peer programmes,
leadership seminars, and development and distribution of adaptable
programmes that target high-risk groups such as patients with severe
mental illness.
Innovative ways of targeting messages and
delivering focused prevention education packages to patients with
psychiatric illness are needed in developing countries. We need to
dispel myths about condoms and improve distribution of condoms
(especially female condoms) in our clinics and psychiatric
institutions. Although most mental health clinics in our area do not
provide any sexual health orientation, it is vital that this situation
is improved upon and that policies are developed towards implementing
prevention packages among mentally ill patients, as prevention
programmes based on research on group-specific needs are most likely to
be successful.36 Clinicians need to address basic HIV knowledge and risk reduction interventions with all patients they see on a daily basis.
Acknowledgments.
We thank Rauf Sayed of the Department of Public Health, University of
Cape Town, for his valuable input and computation of statistics for
this manuscript. We also thank Mrs Beryl Mohr and Ms Phangisile Mtshali
of Bristol Myers Squibb, Secure the Future Foundation, who provided the
necessary support and funding for this study to take place.
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TABLE I. MYTHS AND FACTS RELATING TO SPREAD OF
HIV AND PROTECTION AGAINST ACQUIRING HIV (% OF QUESTIONS ANSWERED AS
‘YES’, ‘NO’ OR ‘UNKNOWN’)
Yes
No
Unknown
Myths relating to spread of HIV
Living in the same house as someone who has HIV
8.6
88.6
2.8
Sharing utensils
86.7
10.9
2.3
Sharing cigarettes, food or drinks
7.7
89.0
2.6
Hugging someone who has HIV
7.3
89.4
2.4
Kissing
25.1
72.8
1.9
Masturbation or body rubbing
65.4
31.5
2.5
Coughing
17.9
78.9
2.9
Mosquito that has bitten someone with HIV
72.3
24.5
2.6
Myths relating to protection against acquiring HIV
A shower after sex reduces the risk of getting HIV
17.7
80.2
2
Oral sex is safe when partners don’t swallow
80.5
16.1
2.9
Additional protective measures from traditional healers
24.2
71.8
3.9
Facts relating to spread of HIV
In one sexual contact
57.0
40.2
2.8
Having sex with multiple partners
92.2
5.7
1.7
During anal sex
92.3
5.2
2.4
Having sex without a condom
82.3
5.1
1.9
Through broken skin, e.g. cuts or grazes
94.6
3.4
1.9
Through injection drug use
89.9
6.6
2.5
An HIV-infected pregnant woman infecting her baby
92.7
5.1
2
TABLE II. FREQUENCY DISTRIBUTION OF ATTITUDE TOWARDS CONDOMS AND SAFE SEX PRACTICES
(% OF QUESTIONS ANSWERED AS ‘YES’, ‘NO’ OR ‘UNKNOWN’)
Yes
No
Unknown
Attitude toward condoms
Do you use condoms with every partner you have sex with intercourse with?
70.2
14.6
14.9
Condoms decrease my full enjoyment of sex so it is not necessary to use it
5.8
91.2
2.9
Have you ever had problems obtaining male/female condoms?
5.9
91.7
2.4
Safe sex practices
I should have as many sexual partners as possible as it will prove that I am a real man
1.5
95.7
2.9
Are you faithful to a single partner?
76.7
8.3
14.9
Have you had more than one partner with whom you have had unprotected sex?
6.4
78.9
14.6
TABLE III. KNOWLEDGE OF HIV/AIDS AND PREVENTION OF ACQUIRING HIV
N
%
Adequate knowledge of HIV/AIDS
No
592
51.4
Yes
559
48.6
Adequate knowledge pertaining to prevention of acquiring HIV
No
665
57.8
Yes
486
42.2
OR = 1.55 (95% CI 1.21 - 1.99); chi-square test: p<0.0004.