Perception of sexuality and fertility in women living with HIV: a questionnaire study from two Nordic countries

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Perception of sexuality and fertility in women living with HIV : a questionnaire study from two Nordic countries. / Wessman, Maria; Aho, Inka; Thorsteinsson, Kristina; Storgaard, Merete; Johansen, Isik S; Lunding, Suzanne; Pedersen, Gitte; Lebech, Anne-Mette; Kivelä, Pia; Helleberg, Marie; Katzenstein, Terese L; Weis, Nina.

In: Journal of the International AIDS Society, Vol. 18, 19962, 2015, p. 1-10.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Wessman, M, Aho, I, Thorsteinsson, K, Storgaard, M, Johansen, IS, Lunding, S, Pedersen, G, Lebech, A-M, Kivelä, P, Helleberg, M, Katzenstein, TL & Weis, N 2015, 'Perception of sexuality and fertility in women living with HIV: a questionnaire study from two Nordic countries', Journal of the International AIDS Society, vol. 18, 19962, pp. 1-10. https://doi.org/10.7448/IAS.18.1.19962

APA

Wessman, M., Aho, I., Thorsteinsson, K., Storgaard, M., Johansen, I. S., Lunding, S., Pedersen, G., Lebech, A-M., Kivelä, P., Helleberg, M., Katzenstein, T. L., & Weis, N. (2015). Perception of sexuality and fertility in women living with HIV: a questionnaire study from two Nordic countries. Journal of the International AIDS Society, 18, 1-10. [19962]. https://doi.org/10.7448/IAS.18.1.19962

Vancouver

Wessman M, Aho I, Thorsteinsson K, Storgaard M, Johansen IS, Lunding S et al. Perception of sexuality and fertility in women living with HIV: a questionnaire study from two Nordic countries. Journal of the International AIDS Society. 2015;18:1-10. 19962. https://doi.org/10.7448/IAS.18.1.19962

Author

Wessman, Maria ; Aho, Inka ; Thorsteinsson, Kristina ; Storgaard, Merete ; Johansen, Isik S ; Lunding, Suzanne ; Pedersen, Gitte ; Lebech, Anne-Mette ; Kivelä, Pia ; Helleberg, Marie ; Katzenstein, Terese L ; Weis, Nina. / Perception of sexuality and fertility in women living with HIV : a questionnaire study from two Nordic countries. In: Journal of the International AIDS Society. 2015 ; Vol. 18. pp. 1-10.

Bibtex

@article{864b7164f1b54b889c9cb34a87cbb792,
title = "Perception of sexuality and fertility in women living with HIV: a questionnaire study from two Nordic countries",
abstract = "INTRODUCTION: As the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive population ages, issues concerning sexuality and fertility, among others, are becoming relevant. HIV is still surrounded by stigma and taboos, and there have been few studies conducted in industrialized settings concerning these questions. We therefore wanted to investigate the perception of sexuality and fertility in women living with HIV (WLWH) in an industrialized setting, using a questionnaire.METHODS: WLWH were recruited at their regular outpatient clinic visits, at the major Departments of Infectious Diseases in Denmark and Finland, from January 2012 to October 2013. A questionnaire was developed, study participants were informed of the nature of study and, if they agreed to participate and signed a consent form, they filled in the questionnaire. Demographic information on the participants was obtained from patient files (in Finland) or from a national HIV cohort (in Denmark). Statistical analysis was performed using STATA, version 11.RESULTS: In total, 560 women were included in the study. The median age was 44 years. The majority were of white European origin, with fully suppressed HIV viral load, CD4 cell count >350 µL and mild or no symptoms of their HIV infection. A total of 62% were sexually active, stating condom use as their sole form of contraception. Of the sexually inactive women, one-third were in steady relationships. Eighty percent reported prior pregnancies, of which the majority had one or more children. Most children were born prior to the women's HIV diagnosis and the mode of conception was predominantly natural. One-quarter of the participating women desired pregnancy, while more than half did not. The remaining quarter either stated that they already had the desired number of children or chose not to answer the question. Fourteen percent stated that their HIV diagnosis ended their wish for children; of these women, the median time of diagnosis was between 1995 and 1996. Pregnancy had been attempted unsuccessfully in one-quarter of study participants. The final question inquired what the risk of mother-to-child transmission was, with all precautions taken. Fifteen percent estimated the risk to be above two percent.CONCLUSIONS: In conclusion, the majority of WLWH in industrialized settings in Denmark and Finland have few HIV-related symptoms, are sexually active and have a strong desire for children.",
author = "Maria Wessman and Inka Aho and Kristina Thorsteinsson and Merete Storgaard and Johansen, {Isik S} and Suzanne Lunding and Gitte Pedersen and Anne-Mette Lebech and Pia Kivel{\"a} and Marie Helleberg and Katzenstein, {Terese L} and Nina Weis",
year = "2015",
doi = "10.7448/IAS.18.1.19962",
language = "English",
volume = "18",
pages = "1--10",
journal = "International AIDS Society. Journal",
issn = "1758-2652",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Perception of sexuality and fertility in women living with HIV

T2 - a questionnaire study from two Nordic countries

AU - Wessman, Maria

AU - Aho, Inka

AU - Thorsteinsson, Kristina

AU - Storgaard, Merete

AU - Johansen, Isik S

AU - Lunding, Suzanne

AU - Pedersen, Gitte

AU - Lebech, Anne-Mette

AU - Kivelä, Pia

AU - Helleberg, Marie

AU - Katzenstein, Terese L

AU - Weis, Nina

PY - 2015

Y1 - 2015

N2 - INTRODUCTION: As the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive population ages, issues concerning sexuality and fertility, among others, are becoming relevant. HIV is still surrounded by stigma and taboos, and there have been few studies conducted in industrialized settings concerning these questions. We therefore wanted to investigate the perception of sexuality and fertility in women living with HIV (WLWH) in an industrialized setting, using a questionnaire.METHODS: WLWH were recruited at their regular outpatient clinic visits, at the major Departments of Infectious Diseases in Denmark and Finland, from January 2012 to October 2013. A questionnaire was developed, study participants were informed of the nature of study and, if they agreed to participate and signed a consent form, they filled in the questionnaire. Demographic information on the participants was obtained from patient files (in Finland) or from a national HIV cohort (in Denmark). Statistical analysis was performed using STATA, version 11.RESULTS: In total, 560 women were included in the study. The median age was 44 years. The majority were of white European origin, with fully suppressed HIV viral load, CD4 cell count >350 µL and mild or no symptoms of their HIV infection. A total of 62% were sexually active, stating condom use as their sole form of contraception. Of the sexually inactive women, one-third were in steady relationships. Eighty percent reported prior pregnancies, of which the majority had one or more children. Most children were born prior to the women's HIV diagnosis and the mode of conception was predominantly natural. One-quarter of the participating women desired pregnancy, while more than half did not. The remaining quarter either stated that they already had the desired number of children or chose not to answer the question. Fourteen percent stated that their HIV diagnosis ended their wish for children; of these women, the median time of diagnosis was between 1995 and 1996. Pregnancy had been attempted unsuccessfully in one-quarter of study participants. The final question inquired what the risk of mother-to-child transmission was, with all precautions taken. Fifteen percent estimated the risk to be above two percent.CONCLUSIONS: In conclusion, the majority of WLWH in industrialized settings in Denmark and Finland have few HIV-related symptoms, are sexually active and have a strong desire for children.

AB - INTRODUCTION: As the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive population ages, issues concerning sexuality and fertility, among others, are becoming relevant. HIV is still surrounded by stigma and taboos, and there have been few studies conducted in industrialized settings concerning these questions. We therefore wanted to investigate the perception of sexuality and fertility in women living with HIV (WLWH) in an industrialized setting, using a questionnaire.METHODS: WLWH were recruited at their regular outpatient clinic visits, at the major Departments of Infectious Diseases in Denmark and Finland, from January 2012 to October 2013. A questionnaire was developed, study participants were informed of the nature of study and, if they agreed to participate and signed a consent form, they filled in the questionnaire. Demographic information on the participants was obtained from patient files (in Finland) or from a national HIV cohort (in Denmark). Statistical analysis was performed using STATA, version 11.RESULTS: In total, 560 women were included in the study. The median age was 44 years. The majority were of white European origin, with fully suppressed HIV viral load, CD4 cell count >350 µL and mild or no symptoms of their HIV infection. A total of 62% were sexually active, stating condom use as their sole form of contraception. Of the sexually inactive women, one-third were in steady relationships. Eighty percent reported prior pregnancies, of which the majority had one or more children. Most children were born prior to the women's HIV diagnosis and the mode of conception was predominantly natural. One-quarter of the participating women desired pregnancy, while more than half did not. The remaining quarter either stated that they already had the desired number of children or chose not to answer the question. Fourteen percent stated that their HIV diagnosis ended their wish for children; of these women, the median time of diagnosis was between 1995 and 1996. Pregnancy had been attempted unsuccessfully in one-quarter of study participants. The final question inquired what the risk of mother-to-child transmission was, with all precautions taken. Fifteen percent estimated the risk to be above two percent.CONCLUSIONS: In conclusion, the majority of WLWH in industrialized settings in Denmark and Finland have few HIV-related symptoms, are sexually active and have a strong desire for children.

U2 - 10.7448/IAS.18.1.19962

DO - 10.7448/IAS.18.1.19962

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 26037151

VL - 18

SP - 1

EP - 10

JO - International AIDS Society. Journal

JF - International AIDS Society. Journal

SN - 1758-2652

M1 - 19962

ER -

ID: 160484116