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A qualitative exploration of family, work, community, and health service influences on hiv treatment uptake and adherence among female sex workers in three cities in Indonesia

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-29, 05:07 authored by E Mitchell, E Lazuardi, I Anintya, E Rowe, K Whitford, DN Wirawan, R Wisaksana, YW Subronto, HD Prameswari, J Kaldor, S Bell
Qualitative data were collected from 34 Indonesian female sex workers to understand their engagement with HIV treatment. Influences that enhanced treatment initiation and adherence included women's desires to stay healthy to continue working to provide for families; awareness of the biomedical benefits of treatment; support from bosses, outreach workers, and peer support groups; and flexible, nonjudgmental HIV service provision. Influences inhibiting treatment initiation and adherence included concerns about unwanted disclosure in the workplace and side effects of medication on women's capacity to earn money through sex work; geographical location of services; discrimination and confidentiality concerns in HIV care services. To improve HIV treatment initiation and adherence among Indonesian female sex workers, future responses should explore health promotion messages that engage with women's family and livelihood obligations; increased funding for community-based peer outreach workers; community-based treatment initiation and supply; and advocacy in work environments to secure support for treatment initiatives.

History

Related Materials

Location

New York, N.Y.

Open access

  • No

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

AIDS Education and Prevention

Volume

32

Pagination

243-259

ISSN

0899-9546

eISSN

1943-2755

Issue

3

Publisher

Guilford Press