Can Self-Management Improve HIV Treatment Engagement, Adherence, and Retention? A Mixed Methods Evaluation in Tanzania and Uganda
Autor: | Anisa Ismail, Amy F Stern, Jude Ssensamba, Monica M Ngonyani, Tamara Nsubuga-Nyombi, Corrina Moucheraud, Jane Mvungi |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
Male
Pediatric AIDS Psychological intervention HIV Infections Tanzania 0302 clinical medicine 7.1 Individual care needs Health care Uganda 030212 general & internal medicine Pediatric Engagement Self-management biology Attendance Health Services Middle Aged Infectious Diseases Retention Public Health and Health Services HIV/AIDS Zero Hunger Female Public Health 0305 other medical science ART Adult Social Work medicine.medical_specialty Adolescent Social Psychology Article Medication Adherence Young Adult 03 medical and health sciences Clinical Research Behavioral and Social Science medicine Humans Aged 030505 public health business.industry Self-Management Public health Public Health Environmental and Occupational Health Odds ratio biology.organism_classification Confidence interval Adherence Family medicine Management of diseases and conditions business |
Zdroj: | AIDS Behav AIDS and behavior, vol 24, iss 5 |
ISSN: | 1573-3254 1090-7165 |
Popis: | This paper presents the evaluation results of a self-management support (SMS) initiative in Tanzania and Uganda, which used quality improvement to provide self-management counseling, nutritional support, and strengthened linkages to community-based services for highest-risk patients (those with malnutrition, missed appointments, poor adherence, high viral load, or low CD4 count). The evaluation assessed improvements in patient engagement, ART adherence, and retention. Difference-in-difference models used clinical data (n=541 in Tanzania, 571 in Uganda) to compare SMS enrollees to people who would have met SMS eligibility criteria had they been at intervention sites. Interviews with health care providers explored experiences with the SMS program and were analyzed using codes derived deductively from the data. By end-line, SMS participants in Tanzania had significantly improved visit attendance (odds ratio 3.53, 95% confidence interval 2.15, 5.77); a non- significant improvement was seen in Uganda (odds ratio 1.62, 95% confidence interval 0.37, 7.02), which may reflect a dose-response relationship due to shorter program exposure there. Self-management can improve vulnerable patients’ outcomes -- but maximum gains may require long implementation periods and accompanying system-level interventions. SMS interventions require long-term investment and should be contextualized in the systems and environments in which they operate. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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