Needs Assessment to Inform a Life Course-Based Support Programme for Adolescents with Perinatally Acquired HIV in Rural Limpopo, South Africa
Highlights
- The community of adolescents with perinatal HIV represents a growing and vulnerable population facing poor ART adherence, mental health challenges, and increased risk of morbidity and onward transmission, particularly in rural South Africa.
- The Life Course in this study assisted in the development of a support programme to address structural, social, as well as other determinants of health that contribute to inequities in HIV outcomes in rural Limpopo.
- The findings of this study pointed out that improving psychosocial support and sustained ART adherence during adolescence is critical for achieving viral suppression and reduction in HIV transmission.
- This work further contributes to preventing health system failure by preventing treatment failure and drug resistance, which might contribute to health system burden.
- Public health programmes should adopt life course-based, adolescent-centred models that integrate psychosocial care, family support, and transition planning into routine HIV services in rural settings.
- Policy makers and researchers should prioritize context-specific interventions for adolescents with perinatal HIV and generate evidence on scalable, community-based support models that strengthen continuity of care across the life span.
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Study Setting
2.3. Population and Sampling
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Data Analysis and Data Integration
2.6. Integration of Qualitative and Quantitative Phases
2.7. Ethical Approval and Informed Consent Statement
2.8. Trustworthiness and Rigour
3. Results
3.1. Theme 1: HIV/AIDS Knowledge
3.1.1. Sub-Theme 1.1: Knowledge of HIV/AIDS and Self-HIV-Positive Status
“HIV is a disease that is caused by mixing of two types of blood where one person is infected by HI virus… It can also be transmitted from the mother to an unborn child and when people have sexual intercourse without protection.”(Participant 002)
“HIV is a virus which lives in a human body but when you take your medication it can be controlled.”(Participant 004)
“I was told it is a disease which is transmitted through unprotected sexual intercourse, and it is deadly… a person will not die if he or she takes medication and follows instructions.”(Participant 006)
“I don’t know anything about HIV, but I have heard that when I sleep with a man, I must use condoms and that I must take my pills every day.”(Participant 009)
“Yes… I know that I am HIV positive.”(Participant 002)
“I know that when you are HIV positive, you should not touch other people’s blood and that you must not play in dirty water.”(Participant 021)
“HIV is that disease (vuvabyi lebyiya), it is not like any other disease.”(Participant 005)
“I just don’t want to have HIV; I would rather take my medication without knowing what it is for…”(Participant 008)
“This sickness of HIV that I have, I only heard people talking, saying ‘HIV, HIV’.”(Participant 001)
3.1.2. Sub-Theme 1.2: Knowledge of ARVs and Related Side Effects
“I don’t know what the treatment is for… I must take them every day, or I will die.”(Participant 016)
“My father told me that if I don’t take my pills, I will get sick and go to the hospital… they will give me an injection that will kill me.”(Participant 001)
“I don’t know; I was only given medication with the instructions only.”(Participant 003)
“HIV is a virus which lives in a human body but when you take your medication it can be controlled.”(Participant 005)
“I never saw a reason to ask my mother… I trust that my mother will not give me something which will harm me.”(Participant 007)
“I feel fine, I trust my father, I don’t believe he can give me something that kills.”(Participant 016)
“My treatment is fine; I don’t have side effects… I feel like I am in jail because I must mind time always.”(Participant 012)
“I get dizzy after taking my pills.”(Participant 005)
“Whenever I take my medication, I feel sick… I think it is because of the ARVs.”(Participant 011)
“Sometimes I get tired of taking treatment… The thought of taking treatment daily for the rest of my life sometimes scares me.”(Participant 011)
“Our lives are in danger as we have to take treatment every day… failing to do that could mean the end of our lives.”(Participant 002)
3.1.3. Sub-Theme 1.3: Knowledge Related to Contraindications of Mixing Herbs and Pills
“Yes, nurses told me that if I mix traditional medicine with my pills, I will get sick…”(Participant 001)
“I know that I must not mix my medication with any medication that is not from the clinic or the doctor.”(Participant 004)
3.1.4. Sub-Theme 1.4: HIV-Positive Status Disclosure to Adolescents
“In 2017 when I fell pregnant, the nurses told me that I was born with HIV…”(Participant 015)
“I asked my sister why I am taking this medication, then she explained to me that I was born with HIV…”(Participant 006)
“No one told me, I have just discovered it along the way… I do a lot of reading about HIV.”(Participant 002)
“I was never told what the medication is for but when I read my file it’s written RVD.”(Participant 005)
“My father told me that the medication that I am taking were for the tonsils.”(Participant 013)
“I was told by my mother that I am living with HIV… it doesn’t mean that I am different from other people.”(Participant 011)
“Two years back, my mother told me… that I am living with HIV.”(Participant 012)
3.1.5. Sub-Theme 1.5: Knowledge of the Dangers of Unprotected Sexual Intercourse
“Yes, but I intend to use condoms every time I have sex…”(Participant 002)
“Yes, they protect us from unwanted pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases like HIV/AIDS.”(Participant 004)
“If I had unprotected sexual intercourse, I could pass the virus to my partner… So, I have decided to wait.”(Participant 002)
3.2. Theme 2: Support Systems
3.2.1. Sub-Theme 2.1: Support from Clinic Nurses
“Nurses are treating me well… they advise me not to give up.”(Participant 017)
“I feel at home when I am at the clinic…”(Participant 001)
“I have questions… but I am afraid to ask.”(Participant 010)
“No, nurses don’t teach me anything related to my disease.”(Participant 010)
3.2.2. Sub-Theme 2.2: Parental and Community Support
“My sister supports me emotionally and financially…”(Participant 008)
“My granny… prepares food for me before taking my medication.”(Participant 010)
“My aunt would say I was not sick… Sometimes she would tell her friends…”(Participant 013)
“I feel angry like I am a real orphan.”(Participant 007)
“Sometimes I cry… When I think about my mom…”(Participant 001)
3.2.3. Sub-Theme 2.3: Support at School from Friends and Teachers
“I have a good relationship with everyone at school.”(Participant 010)
“They would treat me differently…”(Participant 010)
“They will play with me well… but I would not feel well.”(Participant 005)
“My best friend knows that I have to take my pills every day…”(Participant 015)
“My friend knows that I collect treatment monthly…”(Participant 002)
“I feel bad, I don’t accept it…”(Participant 014)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| Variables | Category | Frequency (n) | Percentage (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 12–15 years | 91 | 48.9 |
| 16–19 years | 95 | 51.1 | |
| Gender | Female | 100 | 53.8 |
| Male | 86 | 46.2 | |
| Education | Primary | 64 | 34.4 |
| Secondary | 116 | 62.4 | |
| Tertiary | 6 | 3.2 | |
| Residence type | Rural | 106 | 57.0 |
| Semi-rural | 62 | 33.3 | |
| Urban | 18 | 9.7 | |
| Staying with parents | Yes | 104 | 56.5 |
| No | 82 | 43.5 | |
| Lost a parent due to HIV | Yes | 54 | 29.0 |
| No | 132 | 71.0 |
| Emotional Aspect | Yes n (%) | No n (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Have been admitted or bedridden due to HIV | 26 (15.3) | 144 (84.7) |
| Have ever received help regarding your problem | 57 (33.5) | 113 (66.5) |
| HIV status caused problems with family members | 29 (17.1) | 141 (82.9) |
| Lost friends because of your condition | 30 (17.6) | 140 (82.4) |
| HIV condition disturbed school activities | 40 (23.5) | 130 (76.5) |
| Feel guilty about HIV status | 56 (32.9) | 114 (67.1) |
| Lost interest in activities previously enjoyed | 30 (17.6) | 140 (82.4) |
| Attended support group for adolescents living with HIV | 38 (22.4) | 132 (77.6) |
| Statements | Agree n (%) | Neutral n (%) | Disagree n (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Need more knowledge regarding HIV/AIDS | 102 (54.8) | 66 (35.5) | 18 (9.7) |
| Feel helpless about my HIV positive status | 22 (12.9) | 37 (21.8) | 111 (65.3) |
| Feel like I am not coping with taking medication every day | 66 (35.5) | 80 (43.0) | 40 (21.5) |
| Don’t know how to get out of this situation | 56 (30.1) | 75 (40.3) | 55 (29.6) |
| The health professional attends to me when I come for a consultation | 74 (39.8) | 53 (28.5) | 59 (31.7) |
| Wish nurses can also give attention when I come for my consultation and medication | 100 (53.8) | 43 (23.1) | 43 (23.1) |
| Wish the nurses can talk to me about my HIV status when I come for my consultation | 95 (51.1) | 46 (24.7) | 45 (24.2) |
| Feel sometimes I need clinical counselling regarding my condition | 72 (38.7) | 57 (30.6) | 57 (30.6) |
| Family is supportive of my situation | 83 (44.6) | 54 (29.0) | 49 (26.3) |
| Feel like I am losing control of my situation | 71 (38.2) | 66 (35.5) | 49 (26.3) |
| Have fear about my future | 68 (36.6) | 55 (29.6) | 49 (26.3) |
| My lifestyle has changed since I started taking my ARVs | 37 (19.9) | 49 (26.3) | 100 (53.8) |
| Family do not treat me like other children at home | 53 (28.5) | 51 (27.4) | 82 (44.1) |
| Sometimes feel useless and wish I was dead | 49 (26.3) | 45 (24.2) | 92 (49.5) |
| Inductive | Inductive Sub-Theme | Verbatim Quote (Participant ID) | Life Course Theory Construct | Theoretical Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HIV/AIDS Knowledge | Knowledge of HIV/AIDS and self-HIV-positive status | “HIV is a disease that is caused by mixing of two types of blood where one person is infected by HI virus… It can also be transmitted from the mother to an unborn child.” (Participant 002) | Timing in lives | Knowledge acquisition is age-graded; older adolescents with more education demonstrate more sophisticated understanding, reflecting how developmental timing shapes health literacy. |
| Knowledge of ARVs and related side effects | “I don’t know what the treatment is for… I must take them every day, or I will die.” (Participant 016) | Human agency | Limited treatment literacy constrains adolescents’ ability to exercise agency over their health, reducing adherence from informed choice to fearful compliance. | |
| Knowledge of contra-indications of mixing herbs with pills | “Yes, nurses told me that if I mix traditional medicine with my pills, I will get sick…” (Participant 001) | Linked lives | Health knowledge is transmitted through social connections with healthcare providers, demonstrating how linked lives influence health behaviours. | |
| HIV-positive status disclosure to adolescents | “No one told me, I have just discovered it along the way… I do a lot of reading about HIV.” (Participant 002) | Timing in lives | Delayed or absent disclosure represents a critical juncture where the timing of life events (learning one’s status) shapes subsequent health trajectories. | |
| Knowledge of the dangers of unprotected sexual intercourse | “If I had unprotected sexual intercourse, I could pass the virus to my partner… So, I have decided to wait.” (Participant 002) | Human agency | Despite challenges, adolescents demonstrate agency by making conscious decisions to protect others, reflecting forward-thinking life planning. | |
| Support Systems | Support from clinic nurses | “I have questions… but I am afraid to ask.” (Participant 010) | Linked lives | Healthcare relationships are pivotal social connections that can either facilitate or hinder adolescents’ ability to manage their condition. |
| Parental and community support | “My aunt would say I was not sick… Sometimes she would tell her friends…” (Participant 013) | Linked lives | Family relationships shape developmental trajectories; negative family interactions can become sources of stress rather than support. | |
| Support at school from friends and teachers | “They will play with me well… but I would not feel well.” (Participant 005) | Life-span development | Social relationships across different contexts (school, community) influence psychosocial development and identity formation during adolescence. |
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Mabasa, R.A.; Ntimana, C.B.; Mothiba, T.M.; Skaal, L. Needs Assessment to Inform a Life Course-Based Support Programme for Adolescents with Perinatally Acquired HIV in Rural Limpopo, South Africa. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2026, 23, 441. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph23040441
Mabasa RA, Ntimana CB, Mothiba TM, Skaal L. Needs Assessment to Inform a Life Course-Based Support Programme for Adolescents with Perinatally Acquired HIV in Rural Limpopo, South Africa. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2026; 23(4):441. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph23040441
Chicago/Turabian StyleMabasa, Rirhandzu Austice, Cairo Bruce Ntimana, Tebogo Maria Mothiba, and Linda Skaal. 2026. "Needs Assessment to Inform a Life Course-Based Support Programme for Adolescents with Perinatally Acquired HIV in Rural Limpopo, South Africa" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 23, no. 4: 441. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph23040441
APA StyleMabasa, R. A., Ntimana, C. B., Mothiba, T. M., & Skaal, L. (2026). Needs Assessment to Inform a Life Course-Based Support Programme for Adolescents with Perinatally Acquired HIV in Rural Limpopo, South Africa. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 23(4), 441. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph23040441

