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Preventing Unplanned Pregnancies in HIV Infected Zambian Couples

United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) logo

United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)

Status

Unknown

Conditions

HIV Infections
Pregnancy

Treatments

Behavioral: Future Planning Perspectives program
Behavioral: User-independent contraception program

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

NIH

Identifiers

NCT00067522
HD40125
1R01HD040125-01A1 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Prevention of unplanned pregnancies among HIV infected couples decreases the rate of maternal-child virus transmission and the number of children orphaned when parents die of AIDS. This study will evaluate two programs for reducing the number of unplanned pregnancies among HIV infected couples in Zambia.

Full description

Eighty percent of the world's HIV infections are in sub-Saharan Africa. In Lusaka, the capital of Zambia, 85% of pregnant women are married and 47% are in couples with at least one HIV infected partner (26% concordant positive, 21% discordant). It will be years before short-course antivirals are widely implemented, and many children who escape infection will be left orphaned. There are 360,000 AIDS orphans in Zambia, a country of 9 million people, and 35,000 HIV infected women deliver each year.

An essential component of any HIV prevention strategy must include the prevention of unplanned pregnancies among couples with HIV. Promotion of 'dual method' contraception (condoms for HIV/STD prevention plus a longer acting method for pregnancy prevention) is ideal, but unfortunately not widely promoted. Ultimately, the prevention of unplanned pregnancy in couples with HIV can reduce pediatric HIV, AIDS orphans, and the family consequences of parental illness and death.

This study will evaluate two interventions aimed at reducing the incidence of unplanned pregnancies in HIV infected couples. The first intervention will promote more effective contraception by placing user-independent methods (IUD and Norplant) first in the educational message hierarchy (currently, family planning education highlights oral contraceptives) and employing positive message framing. The second intervention will help couples plan for the consequences of their illness and death. This will include assisting couples to work together to prepare a will, choose a guardian, and make a financial plan. By focusing on the cost of educating existing children and on the need to plan for their future care, couples are encouraged to reflect on the implications of future childbearing. The interventions will be compared with a standard family planning program with respect to impact on incident pregnancy, contraceptive choice and pattern of use, psychosocial and behavioral variables, and future planning actions. Cost-effectiveness will be determined with methods developed jointly by experts in the fields of HIV therapy in Africa and contraception.

Participants in this study will be randomized to either the user-independent contraception intervention, the future planning intervention, the contraception plus planning intervention, or the standard family planning control. Couples will be followed for 1 to 4 years. Women will have study visits every 3 months; men will have a study visit every year. The primary study outcome will be comparison of time to pregnancy across intervention groups.

Sex

All

Ages

16 to 38 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Couples with one or both partners with HIV infection

Exclusion Criteria

  • Pregnant or < 1 month post-partum (couples will be invited to return when the infant is > 1 month old)
  • Peri- or post-menopausal
  • Surgical sterilization or hysterectomy
  • Documented infertility

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Factorial Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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