Literature DB >> 20024717

State of the ART: clinical efficacy and improved quality of life in the public antiretroviral therapy program, Free State province, South Africa.

E Wouters1, F Van Loon, D Van Rensburg, H Meulemans.   

Abstract

The South African public-sector antiretroviral treatment (ART) program has yielded promising early results. To extend and reinforce these preliminary findings, we undertook a detailed assessment of the clinical efficacy and outcomes over two years of ART. The primary objective was to assess the clinical outcomes and adverse effects of two years of ART, while identifying the possible effects of baseline health and patient characteristics. A secondary objective was to address the interplay between positive and negative outcomes (clinical benefits versus adverse effects) in terms of the patients' physical and emotional quality of life (QoL). Clinical outcome, baseline characteristics, health status, and physical and emotional QoL scores were determined from clinical files and interviews with 268 patients enrolled in the Free State ART program at three time points (6, 12, and 24 months of ART). Age, sex, education, and baseline health (CD4 cell count and viral load) were all independently associated with the ART outcome in the early stages of treatment, but their impact diminished as the treatment progressed. The number of patients classified as treatment successes increased over the first two years of ART, whereas the proportion of patients experiencing adverse effects diminished. Importantly, our findings show that ART had strong and stable positive effects on physical and emotional QoL. These favorable results demonstrate that a well-managed public-sector ART program can be very successful within a high-HIV-prevalence resource-limited setting. This finding emphasizes the need to adopt treatment scale-up as a key policy priority, while at the same time ensuring that the highest standards of healthcare provision are maintained. Healthcare services should also target vulnerable groups (males, less-educated patients, those with low baseline CD4 cell counts, and high baseline viral loads) who are most likely to experience treatment failure.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 20024717     DOI: 10.1080/09540120902884034

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AIDS Care        ISSN: 0954-0121


  10 in total

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3.  Who is accessing public-sector anti-retroviral treatment in the Free State, South Africa? An exploratory study of the first three years of programme implementation.

Authors:  Edwin Wouters; Christo Heunis; Koen Ponnet; Francis Van Loon; Frederik le Roux Booysen; Dingie van Rensburg; Herman Meulemans
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2010-07-01       Impact factor: 3.295

4.  Who Should We Target? The Impact of Individual and Family Characteristics on the Expressed Need for Community-Based Treatment Support in HIV Patients in South Africa.

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7.  Unpacking the dynamics of double stigma: how the HIV-TB co-epidemic alters TB stigma and its management among healthcare workers.

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9.  Quality of life in individuals living with HIV/AIDS attending a public sector antiretroviral service in Cape Town, South Africa.

Authors:  Mweete D Nglazi; Sacha J West; Joel A Dave; Naomi S Levitt; Estelle V Lambert
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10.  Comparison of Zidovudine and Tenofovir Based Regimens With Regard to Health-Related Quality of Life and Prevalence of Symptoms in HIV Patients in a Kenyan Referral Hospital.

Authors:  Jilian O Etenyi; Faith A Okalebo; Margaret Oluka; Kipruto A Sinei; George O Osanjo; Amanj Kurdi; Johanna C Meyer; Brian Godman; Sylvia Opanga
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  10 in total

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