Time trends in management of HIV-positive pregnant women in Northern Tanzania: A registry-based study

Citation: 
Tormod Rebnord , Truls Østbye, Blandina Theophil Mmbaga, Bariki Mchome, Rolv Terje Lie, Anne Kjersti Daltveit
Publication year: 
2017

Objective

To examine time trends in antenatal factors and delivery characteristics in Northern Tanzania, and relate these to national guidelines for HIV in pregnancy.


Design

Registry-based study.


Setting

Northern Tanzania, 2000–2014.


Population or sample

Deliveries (n = 33 346).


Methods

HIV-positive women were compared with HIV-negative women during four periods spanning changing national guidelines.


Main outcome measures

Known maternal HIV status, HIV treatment for woman, number of antenatal care (ANC) visits, routine folate/iron in pregnancy, anemia, delivery complications/interventions.


Results

We observed an increase in deliveries with known maternal HIV status and women receiving HIV treatment, and a decline in deliveries with positive maternal HIV status (p-values for trend <0.001). The proportion of women with less than four ANC visits increased to above 30 percent irrespective of HIV status. Use of routine folate/iron increased, corresponding to a decrease in anemia which was strongest in HIV-negative women. Incidence of elective caesarean section (CS) and emergency CS remained unchanged for HIV-positive women (7.1% and 25.5%, respectively, in the last period). Use of invasive procedures declined in both groups of women. Mothers who were young, single, had low education, high parity or lived in the rural area more often had indicators of poor antenatal care.


Conclusions

Increasing adherence to national guidelines over time was found for most selected outcomes. Still, a high occurrence of insufficient ANC, anemia and emergency CS call for efforts to explore and identify barriers that hinder optimal care.