Despite women living with HIV (WLWH) being disproportionately criminalized and overrepresented within correctional facilities, there remains limited longitudinal research with WLWH examining factors that make WLWH vulnerable to incarceration. Data are drawn from SHAWNA (Sexual health and HIV/AIDS: Women's Longitudinal Needs Assessment), a community-based research cohort with cisgender and transgender WLWH in Metro Vancouver, Canada. Multivariable logistic regression using generalized estimating equations (GEE) and an exchangeable working correlation matrix was used to prospectively model correlates of recent incarceration exposure over a seven-year period. Amongst 289 WLWH, 76% had been incarcerated in their lifetime, and 17% had experienced recent incarceration. In multivariable GEE analysis, younger age (AOR: 0.92 per year older, 95% CI: 0.89-0.96), recent homelessness (AOR: 2.81, 95% CI: 1.46-5.41), recent gender-based (physical and/or sexual) violence (AOR: 2.26, 95% CI: 1.20-4.22) and recent opioid use (AOR: 1.83, 95% CI: 1.00-3.36), were significantly associated with recent incarceration. Lifetime exposure to gender-based violence by police (AOR: 1.97, CI: 0.97-4.02) was marginally associated with increased odds of recent incarceration. This research suggests a critical need for trauma-informed interventions for WLWH during and following incarceration. Interventions must be gender specific, include housing and substance use supports, and address the impact of gender-based violence.
Keywords: Gendered-based violence; Illicit substance use; Incarceration; Prison; Women living with HIV.