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Study finds high use of HIV pill in polygamy

 Doctors have reported a high use of anti HIV pill in polygamy unions that their monogamous counterparts. [Courtesy]

More women in polygamous unions, than those in monogamous relationships are taking up the daily HIV prevention pill. A study presented last month in Boston, US, by Dr John Kinuthia of Kenyatta National Hospital (KNH), showed a high acceptance of the pill among women in polygamous unions.

This, implied women in polygamous marriages are aware they are at a higher risk of HIV infection by virtue of the multiplicity of partners involved and need protection.

But the study by Dr Kinuthia, also head of research at KNH, shows women in polygamous unions do not necessarily find them a bed of roses.

Last year the Ministry of Health launched a once-a-day pill to protect HIV negative people against infection. The pill, Truvada is recommended for men and women, who think they are at a substantial risk of HIV infection.

So far data shows about 13,000 Kenyans including truck drivers, prostitutes and drug injectors, are taking the pill. In his study Dr Kinuthia, also affiliated to the University of Washington, US, had assessed the acceptance of the pill by women attending antenatal clinics in Western Kenya.

“Women in Western Kenya, a region with high HIV prevalence rates, are at a high risk of infection,” Dr Kinuthia had told the conference.

The study had screened 1,008 pregnant women last year for willingness to take up the HIV prevention pill also called Pre-exposure Prophylaxis or PrEP. “More women in polygamous marriages were initiated for PrEP than women in monogamous marriages,” said Dr Kinuthia.

His message targeted the estimated 2.5 million spouses in polygamous unions in Kenya. These are about 1.8 million wives and about 700,000 husbands in the unions. The Kenya Demographic Health Survey (KDHS) estimates that 60 per cent of women in Kenya are married and 13 per cent of these are in polygamous unions.

North Eastern has the highest proportion of women, more than a third or 36 per cent in polygamous unions. In Nairobi only two per cent of women are in a polygamous unions but this does not take into account those secretly living in similar relationships.

Western, Nyanza, Rift Valley and Coast regions all have proportions ranging between 15 and 23 per cent of women in polygamous relationships. Among men, Nyanza has the highest number living in polygamous unions while the least number of males in such unions are to be found in Central Province, according to the 2009 KDHS.

And in an earlier study on cervical cancer prevention in Kenya by Eleanor Atieno Ochodo then with Royal Tropical Institute of the University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands the researcher had linked polygamy to a higher risk of cervical cancer.

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