Mental Health Problems In Pregnant And Postpartum Women Living With HIV In Sub Saharan Africa: Systematic Review And Meta-Analysis Protocol.
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Plos One
Abstract
Background
Existing evidence on the burden of mental health problems among pregnant and postpartum
women living with HIV, a vulnerable population in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), is limited and
fragmented, affecting the development of context-sensitive and integrated interventions.
This systematic review aims to provide an up-to-date and comprehensive synthesis of available evidence to estimate the burden and identify the determinants of mental health prob lems among pregnant and postpartum women living with HIV across countries in sub-Saharan Africa.
Methods
We will retrieve all relevant studies (published and unpublished) through searches in
PubMed, Embase, PsycINFO, CINAHL, LILACS, Google Scholar, Scopus and Web of Science from inception to 30th June 2024, without language restriction. We will use the following
search terms ‘mental health disorder’, ‘mental health problem’, ‘pregnant women’, ‘postpartum women’ and ‘HIV’ nested with all applicable alternate terms and the names of countries
in SSA for running the searches. We will also search HINARI, African Index Medicus, African Journals Online, Academic Search Premier, medRxiv, ProQuest, EBSCO Open Disser tations, and reference lists of relevant studies. We will contact experts in the field for
potentially relevant unpublished studies. All retrieved articles from the electronic databases
and grey literature will be collated and deduplicated using Endnote and exported to Rayyan
QCRI. Two reviewers will independently select studies using a pretested study selection
flow chart developed from the pre-specified eligibility criteria. Two reviewers will extract data
using a pretested data extraction form and assess the risk of bias in the included studies
using the risk of bias tool for prevalence studies by Hoy et al. (2012). Any disagreements will
be resolved through discussion between the reviewers. Binary outcomes (prevalence and incidence of mental health problems among pregnant and postpartum women living with
HIV) will be evaluated using pooled proportions (for non-comparative studies) and odds
ratio (OR) or risk ratio (RR) (for comparative studies), and mean difference for continuous
outcomes, all will be reported with their 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Heterogeneity will
be assessed graphically for overlapping CIs and statistically using the I
2 statistic. If substan tial heterogeneity is found, random-effects model meta-analysis will be performed; other wise, fixed-effect meta-analysis will be employed. We will conduct subgroup analysis (to
assess the impact of heterogeneity) and sensitivity analyses to test the robustness of the
generated effect estimates to the quality domains. The overall level of evidence will be
assessed using GRADE (Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and
Evaluations).
Expected outcomes
The review is expected to produce an up-to-date and comprehensive synthesis of the avail able evidence, allowing for the generation of country-specific estimates of the burden of
mental health problems among mothers living with HIV across SSA populations. Also, the
review will attempt to identify the determinants of mental health problems among pregnant
and postpartum women living with HIV, to shed light on the factors that contribute to the
occurrence of mental health problems in this vulnerable population.
Description
Research Article
Citation
Danso-Appiah A, Akuffo KO, Owiredu D (2024) Mental health problems in pregnant and postpartum women living with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa: Systematic review and meta-analysis protocol. PLoS ONE 19(10): e0308810.
