Care requirements for clients who present after rape and clients who presented after consensual sex as a minor at a clinic in Harare, Zimbabwe, from 2011 to 2014.
Rebecca E HarrisonLinda PearsonMichael VereProsper ChonziBrian Tafadzwa HoveSharon MabayaMargaret ChigwambaJuliana NhamburoJuliet GuraAn VandeborneSandra SimonsDaphne LagrouEva De PleckerRafael Van den BerghPublished in: PloS one (2017)
The experiences of those who consent to sex as a minor and those that have experienced forced sex were very different. The standardised SGBV medical response does not fully meet the needs to protect minors who have consented to sex from HIV or unwanted pregnancies. Clients who present for having consented to sex as a minor might benefit more from being offered long-term family planning or being assessed as a sero-discordant couple rather than simply PEP and ECP as is relevant for clients who have been raped. More provision of health care is needed for minors to ensure they have access to enough information and protection from HIV, other STIs and unwanted pregnancy, before they decide to engage in sexual intercourse, rather than as an emergency at an SGBV clinic.