3rd International Conference on

Infectious Diseases

November 06-07, 2025 | London, UK

Radisson Hotel & Conference Centre London Heathrow
Address: Building A, Bath Road, Heathrow Boulevard, Sipson, West Drayton, UB7 0DU, United Kingdom
Email: infectiousdisease@scitechconference.com
Phone: +44 2045874848
WhatsApp: +44 7383507342

Infectious Diseases 2025

Prossy Namusisi speaker at International Conference on Infectious Diseases
Prossy Namusisi

Kawempe National Referral Hospital, Uganda


Abstract:

Introduction: Missed opportunities in the prevention of mother to child transmission of HIV (PMTCT) cascade account for the highest proportion of vertical transmissions observed in the era of dolutegravir. However, these and the factors associated with them have not been well described. We analyzed missed opportunities and associated factors at a high-volume tertiary hospital in Uganda.

Methods
: This was a matched case control study. Cases were perinatally exposed HIV Infected children while Controls were HIV Exposed Uninfected children under 5years of age admitted at MNRH. We determined the prevalence of missed opportunities, and conditional logistic regression was used to obtain the odds of missed opportunities among cases compared to the controls. Modified poison regression was used to analyze the factors associated with missed opportunities. We also documented and ranked the frequencies of mother-reported reasons for missing opportunities.


Results: The mean age of study participants was 24.4 (+16.6) months. The prevalence of any missed opportunity was 33/45(73.3%) among cases and 18/135(13.3%) among controls. Missed opportunities in maternal HIV testing [OR 11.0, CI = 3.07, 39.42] and Nevirapine use [OR 5.84, CI=1.11, 30.61] were associated with Mother to child HIV transmission. Factors associated with missed opportunities included maternal stigma PR 1.63 CI [1.05, 2.52] and late diagnosis of HIV PR 3.35 CI [1.96, 5.73]. Mother-reported reasons for missed opportunities included services not provided by the health facilities.


Conclusion: The prevalence of any missed opportunity was high. Maternal experience of stigma was associated with substantially higher missed opportunity along the PMTCT cascade

Biography:

Namusisi Prossy is a dedicated pediatrician at Kawempe National Referral Hospital with a Master of Medicine in Paediatrics and Child Health from Makerere University and a Master of Public Health from the Bloomberg School of Public Health, USA, with a concentration in Epidemiology and Biostatistics. Her recent publication focusses on HIV/AIDS.