Cook Ryan, Jones Deborah, Redding Colleen A, Zulu Robert, Chitalu Ndashi, Weiss Stephen M
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Dominion Tower, 1400 NW 10th Ave. Suite 404A, Miami, FL, 33136, USA.
Cancer Prevention Research Center, University of Rhode Island, Kingston, RI, USA.
AIDS Behav. 2016 Nov;20(11):2503-2513. doi: 10.1007/s10461-015-1079-x.
The World Health Organization has recommended the scale-up of voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) for HIV prevention in sub-Saharan Africa; however, men are often uninterested in undergoing VMMC. The Spear & Shield project enrolled 668 men and female partners from ten Zambian community health centers into parallel interventions promoting VMMC for HIV prevention or time-matched control conditions. A mediation model was utilized to examine the relationships between changes in women's acceptance of VMMC and men's readiness to undergo the procedure. Results demonstrated that, at 12 months post-intervention, a 5.9 % increase in the likelihood of undergoing VMMC among men in the experimental condition could be attributed to increased women's acceptance. From a public health perspective, involving women in VMMC promotion interventions such as the Spear & Shield project could significantly impact the demand for VMMC in Zambia.
世界卫生组织已建议在撒哈拉以南非洲扩大自愿男性包皮环切术(VMMC)以预防艾滋病毒;然而,男性往往对接受VMMC不感兴趣。“矛与盾”项目招募了来自赞比亚十个社区卫生中心的668名男性及其女性伴侣,将他们分为平行干预组,一组推广VMMC以预防艾滋病毒,另一组为时间匹配的对照条件组。采用中介模型来检验女性对VMMC接受度的变化与男性接受该手术意愿之间的关系。结果表明,在干预后12个月,实验组男性接受VMMC可能性增加5.9%可归因于女性接受度的提高。从公共卫生角度来看,让女性参与诸如“矛与盾”项目这样的VMMC推广干预措施,可能会对赞比亚VMMC的需求产生重大影响。