| Literature DB >> 21744381 |
Morten Skovdal1, Catherine Campbell, Kundai Nhongo, Constance Nyamukapa, Simon Gregson.
Abstract
Great progress has been made in achieving universal access to antiretroviral therapy (ART). However, for successful viral suppression, patients must adhere to rigid and complex treatment regimens. With three quarters of antiretroviral (ARV) users in Africa adhering successfully, African countries have achieved extraordinary levels of adherence given the levels of poverty in which many ARV users live. Nevertheless, one quarter of ARV users still struggle to adhere and run the risk of experiencing viral replication, clinical progression or even drug resistance. Much has been written about ART adherence, but little has been done to systematically categorise the spectrum of factors that influence ART. In this paper, we use a Zimbabwean case study to develop a framework for ART programme planners and implementers seeking to identify and tackle social obstacles to adherence. We draw on interviews and group discussions with 25 nurses and 53 adult ARV users, which we analysed through a three-tiered thematic approach, allowing us to categorise our findings into broader dimensions that can transcend our case study and be applied elsewhere. Our findings suggest that ART adherence is influenced by the material, symbolic, relational and institutional contexts in which ARV users live as well as the patient's motivation, participation and psychosocial responses to ART. This framework allows us to examine both the social context in which ART programmes are located and the psychosocial factors that influence patient behaviours. We offer this framework as a resource for ART programme planners and implementers seeking to improve ART compliance in resource-poor settings.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21744381 PMCID: PMC3172620 DOI: 10.1002/hpm.1082
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Health Plann Manage ISSN: 0749-6753
Summary of participants and research methods
| Participants | Interviews | FGD | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nurse | 25 | 18 | 1 |
| Patient | 53 | 19 | 4 |
| Total | 78 | 37 | 5 |
FGD, focus groups discussions.
Global theme: contextual level of analysis
| Codes | Factors influencing adherence (basic themes) | Dimensions (organising themes) |
|---|---|---|
| • Poverty | 1. Lack of adequate food, or fear of supplementary food costs, stop patients from taking their drugs. | Material |
| • Food | ||
| • Distance to clinic | ||
| • Transport costs | 2. Patients are more likely to attend monthly consultations, and seek urgent medical treatment, if the clinics are nearby and transport is available and affordable. | |
| • Hospital costs | ||
| 3. Many patients struggle to meet the hospital costs associated with AIDS treatment. | ||
| • Stigma | 4. Many patients feel stigmatised and fear being recognised as an AIDS patient, preventing them from seeking ART services. | Symbolic |
| • Gender roles | ||
| • Diminishing power of traditional healers | ||
| 5. Notions of masculinity inhibit men from participating in ART programmes and can also prevent women from adhering. | ||
| 6. AIDS and ART are now part of the public sphere. Everyone knows how to prevent and treat AIDS. | ||
| 7. As biomedicine proves its worth, fewer patients see the need to consult traditional healers. | ||
| • Social support | 8. Patients can optimise ART adherence by drawing on support from community members and friends. | Relational |
| • Children | ||
| • Treatment partner | ||
| • Relationship with nurses | 9. Family members who act as treatment partners can facilitate ART adherence. | |
| 10. The quality of relationship that patients have with health professionals influences adherence. | ||
| • Churches and faith | 11. Churches can both facilitate and undermine ART adherence. | Institutional support |
| • Food aid/NGOs | ||
| • Health service improvements | 12. NGOs play an important role in mobilising support groups and providing food aid. | |
| • Counselling | ||
| • Waiting time and opening hours | 13. Good adherence depends on good quality health services, including free and readily available drugs, good counselling and advice, favourable waiting and opening times. | |
| • Period lack of ARVs |
ART, antiretroviral therapy; ARV, antiretroviral; NGOs, non-governmental organisations.
Global theme: psychosocial dimensions influencing adherence
| Codes | Factors influencing adherence (basic themes) | Dimensions (organising themes) |
|---|---|---|
| • Seeing improvements | 14. Patients are encouraged to stay on ART when they experience improvements to health. | Patient motivation |
| • Side effects | ||
| • Taking responsibility | ||
| • Hope | 15. Hope and having reasons to live a healthy life facilitate ART adherence. | |
| • Desire for life | ||
| • Habit | 16. With time, patients may be into the habit of taking drugs or they may become complacent and stop taking them. | |
| • Complacency/negligence | ||
| 17. Patients may decide to stop taking ARVs if the side effects become too severe. | ||
| • Disclosure and denial | 18. Actively disclosing HIV status facilitates adherence as people around the patients support them. | Patient participation |
| • Mobilising support | ||
| • Income generation | ||
| • Agency | 19. Some patients actively create social spaces to facilitate their adherence. | |
| 20. Some patients actively engage in income-generating activities to sustain the healthy diet required for ART. | ||
| • Depression | 21. Some patients, men in particular, resort to alcohol to avoid a reality as an HIV-positive individual. | Psychosocial responses to ART |
| • Alcohol | ||
| • Spiritual beliefs and traditional healing | 22. Patients may turn to non-biomedical resources for support, some of which may hinder or support adherence. | |
| • Confidence | ||
| • Positive identities | ||
| • Psychosocial problems | 23. Many patients develop confidence in their ability to take control over their health and begin to construct positive social identities, differentiating themselves from those who have not yet been tested. |
ART, antiretroviral therapy; ARV, antiretroviral.
Analytical framework to explore factors influencing ART adherence
| Influences on ART | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Contextual dimensions | Psychosocial dimensions | |||||
| Material | Symbolic | Relational | Institutional support | Patient motivation | Patient participation | Psychosocial responsesto ART |
| For example | ||||||
| • Access to food | • Fear and stigma | • Social support | • Support from churches | • Seeing improvements | • Status and need for treatment | • Alcohol abuse |
| • Distance to clinic | • Gender constructions | • Family support and treatment partners | • Support from NGOs | • Hope and desire for life | • Mobilising social support | • Spiritual advice |
| • Transport costs | • AIDS and ART in public sphere | • Quality of health services | • Habit and complacency | • Constructing empowering social identities | ||
| • Treatment related costs | • Influence of traditional healers | • Patient/nurse relationships | • Experiencing side effects | • Engaging in income-generating activities | ||
ART, antiretroviral therapy; NGOs, non-governmental organisations.