| Literature DB >> 23758879 |
Beth Rachlis1, Farah Ahmad, Monique van Lettow, Adamson S Muula, Medson Semba, Donald C Cole.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Retention in antiretroviral therapy (ART) programmes remains a challenge in many settings including Malawi, in part due to high numbers of losses to follow-up. Concept Mapping (CM), a mix-method participatory approach, was used to explore why patients on ART are lost to follow-up (LTFU) by identifying: 1) factors that influence patient losses to follow-up and 2) barriers to effective and efficient tracing in Zomba, Malawi.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23758879 PMCID: PMC3698212 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-13-210
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Number of participants in brainstorming, sorting, rating, and interpretation activities
| Patients | 18 | 23 (including n=9 LTFU) | 41 | |
| Providers | 29 | 20 | 49 | |
| Patients | 11 | 9 (including n = 1 LTFU) | 20 | |
| Providers | 14 | 12 | 26 | |
| Patients | 14 | 20 (including n = 2 LTFU) | 34 | |
| Providers | 17 | 18 | 35 | |
| Patients | | 20 patients (including n = 1 LTFU) | 20 | |
| Providers | 15 | 15 | ||
Note: Provider participants included ART providers, Zomba District Health Office Management Team, and Health Surveillance Assistants; LTFU = patient lost to follow-up.
Figure 1Overview of the concept mapping process.
Figure 2Final nine cluster concept map.
Cluster characteristics and ratings
| Poor documentation | 3.3 (0.18) | 3.5 (0.31) |
| Resources needed for effective tracing | 3.3 (0.23) | 3.6 (0.14) |
| Social and financial support issues | 3.3 (0.35) | 3.4 (0.34) |
| Health worker attitudes | 3.1 (0.25) | 3.5 (0.27) |
| Health worker issues related to tracing | 3.1 (0.40) | 3.5 (0.20) |
| Stigma and fears | 2.9 (0.44) | 3.4 (0.29) |
| Access to ART | 2.7 (0.23) | 3.1 (0.22) |
| Beliefs | 2.6 (0.35) | 3.0 (0.17) |
| Lack of knowledge and acceptance | 2.6 (0.52) | 2.9 (0.33) |
The consolidated list of 64 statements
| Poor documentation | Poor filing means that patient files can get lost when patients on ART are being transferred |
| The patient has died but their death is not reported | |
| Patients have little social support in the villages due to lack of counsellors, support groups and community-based organizations | |
| The patient has moved away to another clinic without being properly transferred | |
| Patient visits are not being recorded accurately | |
| Resources needed for effective tracing | Tracing starts too late because of the way a ‘defaulter’ is defined (e.g., missing an appointment by 2 months or more) |
| The HSAs have difficulty locating patients because they do not live in their catchment areas and therefore do not know the villages where people come from | |
| Patients on ART can’t be found if the HSAs do not have their proper address and/or their locator forms | |
| They live in areas that are difficult to reach so that the HSAs have difficulty tracing them | |
| Health workers have difficulty locating patients without working phones or phone numbers | |
| There is no fuel or dedicated transport for tracing | |
| Social and financial support issues | Being too sick to come to the clinic |
| The distance to the clinic is too far from some patients on ART | |
| The guardians of the patient refuse to go the hospital to collect their ARVs from them | |
| Patients on ART can’t afford transport means to come to the clinic because they face poverty | |
| A lack of support for ART patients especially when they are orphans | |
| Patients on ARV medicines may also have to deal with other diseases such as chronic illness | |
| Patients on ARV medicines feel hungry but they can’t afford to buy extra food | |
| They are attending to another sick relative (e.g., child) | |
| Health worker attitudes | Patients are on ART feel that there is a lack of confidentiality on behalf of the health workers (e.g., drugs given without privacy) |
| Patients on ART get disappointed when they are not put on a different ART regimen to help manage their side effects | |
| Patients are not properly educated on ART because of little one-on-one counselling with the health workers | |
| Patients on ART do not like the way they are treated by health workers | |
| Patients feel shy to come to the health centre because there is limited space and no privacy | |
| Patients on ART get frustrated because it takes too long before they are seen at the hospital | |
| Anxiety about going back to the clinic after missing many appointments | |
| To hide from follow-up, patients change their names and identities | |
| Health worker issues related to tracing | There are too many patients needing to be traced and not enough health workers to trace them |
| Poor communication and coordination between the HSA and ART providers | |
| There is no coordinator for ART tracing and no specific follow-up health workers | |
| There is no training on how to do the follow-up of ART patients | |
| The health workers just wait for the patients to come back on their own because their are no consequences for them if they don’t trace them | |
| There is no deliberate effort to trace ART patients because there are no incentives for the HSAs | |
| The HSAs do not actually trace patients and instead write fake information about patient visits | |
| The HSAs don’t value tracing because they have too much other work | |
| Stigma and fears | The patient on ART fears stigmatization because they are transferred to a health centre that is near to where they live |
| Fear of divorce if their spouse or loved one discover that they are on ART | |
| The patient doesn’t want to be associated with ARV drugs because of stigma and fear of isolation | |
| Patients on ART experience side effects from the medicine | |
| Patients on ART fear side effects and the unknown | |
| Patients on ART face mental health issues | |
| Patients stop coming to the clinic because they get their ARV drugs from somewhere else | |
| Fear dismissal at the work place because their employer may discover that they are on ART | |
| Access to ART | Patients have difficulty finding ARVs when they travel both within and outside the country |
| ARV medicines are not always accessible because of inconsistent drug availability | |
| Not being able to meet strict hospital policies (e.g., coming with a guardian) | |
| The patient just picked up a guardian at the market and the guardian cannot be used to trace the patient | |
| Patients are mobile and they move around a lot | |
| Beliefs | Religion and the belief that prayer, not ARVs, will heal them |
| Church fellowships discourage them from taking their ARVs and tell them they are healed from HIV | |
| Patients on ART believe that they are HIV negative because they gave birth to a negative baby or re-tested negative for HIV | |
| Beliefs in traditional medicines | |
| Patients on ART believe that they are healed from HIV if they sleep with a virgin or a younger person | |
| Lack of knowledge and acceptance | Patients feel tired of taking their drugs |
| Patients on ART don’t see the need to be on drugs anymore when they feel better and their health has improved | |
| When there is no improvement in their health, patients on ART are frustrated because they were expecting a quick recovery | |
| The patient on ART has not accepted their HIV status | |
| Patients on ART want to have a normal life and feel the medicine is a burden | |
| Patients on ART are just not serious about their lives | |
| Patients see no value in taking their ARVs anymore because they have given up on life | |
| Patients find new marriage partners and do not want them to find out that they are on ART | |
| Pregnancy and wanting to protect the unborn child from ART | |
| Patients prefer alcohol over taking ART | |
| Patients have too many lovers and not enough time to take their ARVs |
ARV antiretroviral, HSA Health Surveillance Assistant.