The relationship between intimate partner violence and HIV: A model-based evaluation
Journal Article
2017-02-16
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Infectious Disease Modelling
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Ke Ai
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University of Cape Town
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Abstract
Background: Many studies have shown that women who have experienced intimate
partner violence (IPV) are at a greater risk of HIV, but the factors accounting for this association
are unclear, and trials of interventions to reduce IPV have not consistently
reduced HIV incidence.
Methods: This study uses an agent-based model, calibrated to South African data sources,
to evaluate hypotheses about likely causal pathways linking IPV, HIV, and other confounding
factors. Assumptions about associations between IPV and HIV risk behaviours
were based on reviews of international literature.
Findings: There is an association between past IPV experience and HIV incidence even
when no causal effects are assumed (IRR 1.28, 95% CI 1.23e1.34), because women with a
propensity for multiple partners are more likely to have ever been in a relationship with a
violent partner. If, in addition, men with a propensity for concurrent relationships are
more likely to perpetrate IPV, the IRR increases to 1.42 (95% CI 1.36e1.48), consistent with
empirical IRR estimates. Alternative scenarios in which experience of IPV is assumed to
cause changes in women's sexual behaviour have little effect on the IRR. An intervention
that reduces IPV by 50% could be expected to reduce HIV incidence by at most 1.3%.
Interpretation: Much of the observed association between IPV and HIV is likely to be due to
confounding behavioural factors. Although interventions to reduce IPV are important,
these interventions alone are unlikely to have a substantial impact on HIV incidence.
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Reference:
Rigby, S. W., & Johnson, L. F. (2017). The relationship between intimate partner violence and HIV: A model-based evaluation. Infectious Disease Modelling, 2(1), 71-89.