“…Nonetheless, studies from sub-Saharan Africa have reported inadequate, unclear, or an absence of national guidelines for the returning of genomics research results, yet the ethical, legal, and social implications of these results do not only affect participants but may also affect family members and research communities (Chanda-Kapata et al, 2015; de Vries et al, 2017; Staunton and de Vries, 2020). Researchers in sub-Saharan Africa have reported several ethical considerations for the returning of individual genomic and genetics results, including the need for community engagement, genetics counselling services and determining appropriate methods of communicating genetics results to participants (Matimba et al, 2022; Ochieng et al, 2022). However, there is limited literature on how individual results from pharmacogenomics research should be safely returned to people living HIV, a chronic disease that is still associated with many ethical and social issues.…”