Skip to content

Men Wait Much Longer to Seek Treatment for HIV/​AIDS New Study Claims

July 31/2018

by Françoise Makanda, Communications Officer, Dalla Lana School of Public Health

Men seek and start treatment for HIV/AIDS when they are much sicker compared to women, according to a new study by researchers from around the world, including at the Dalla Lana School of Public Health.

“It’s a gender equity issue but not the kind we are used to thinking about. Men tend to wait to get tested and seek treatment until they are really sick and cannot ignore it. They face challenges like the culture of hyper-masculinity and not wanting to appear weak or acknowledge multiple sexual partners. It’s the stigma and psychosocial challenges they face,” said Paula Braitstein, Associate Professor of Epidemiology at DLSPH who participated in the study along with other world-leading HIV/AIDS researchers.

“Women tend to get tested voluntarily or when they become pregnant and seek prenatal care. In lower-income countries, women will get tested while accessing care for themselves or for their child, which is part of an integrated process in Kenya,” said Braitstein who also holds a Canadian Institute of Health Research Applied Public Health Chair.

The study, Sex-based differences in antiretroviral therapy initiation, switching and treatment interruptions: global overview from the International Epidemiologic Databases to Evaluate Aids, published June 29, 2018 in the Journal of the International AIDS Society surveyed 715,252 men and women in seven world regions, including Australia, North America, South America and Africa.

Leading experts have warned that HIV infections are surging in some parts of the world due to general and dangerous complacency. The focus on virus-suppressing treatment is taking away attention from basic prevention. Braitstein, a 25-year veteran in HIV/AIDS research, has experienced this complacency first hand.

“I remember speaking with a 22-year-old Toronto man who didn’t understand how HIV is transmitted. I think complacency is related to our failure to educate youth on both HIV and other STIs.”

Braitstein recalls a time when there were no treatments for HIV/AIDS, which encouraged the need for basic protection. Today, HIV is both a preventable and a manageable chronic disease. While new infections and HIV/AIDS death are lower, experts have seen an increase in people on life-saving antiretroviral therapy. At least in high-income settings, Braitstein said, some people at risk and young people are taking it for granted.

But Braitstein says it’s not all bad news. The study also found that in some parts of Africa and South America the majority of people living with HIV/AIDS stayed on the same treatment much longer, sometimes for more than 10 years, compared to their North American counterparts. In fact, 50 per cent of participants surveyed had taken antiretroviral therapy for more than eight years. While this might be good news because at least on paper the treatment lasts, it may also be because of disparities in access to technologies for monitoring treatment effectiveness and alternatives to switch to, if needed.

“In North America, there’s all sorts of testing to see if the virus has developed resistance and specialists are likely to be quick to change treatment, but in most middle to low-income countries, health professionals don’t have those options. Expanding third line treatment or individually tailored regimens is costly.”

In North America, switching treatment is not a bad thing. Health professionals have access to more advanced technology and more treatment options. Specialists are also able to monitor the virus and immune system to understand when the virus is more sensitive to a treatment.

For now, Braitstein is eager to see more public engagement on HIV/AIDS prevention as a whole.

“I think it’s important that more investments are made in virologic monitoring and testing. We also need more research and innovative programming to engage men to help improve their uptake of and adherence to treatment and overcome the pernicious stigma around HIV that continues to persist around the world today.”