| Literature DB >> 25303241 |
Christopher J Colvin1, Sarah Konopka2, John C Chalker3, Edna Jonas2, Jennifer Albertini4, Anouk Amzel5, Karen Fogg6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite global progress in the fight to reduce maternal mortality, HIV-related maternal deaths remain persistently high, particularly in much of Africa. Lifelong antiretroviral therapy (ART) appears to be the most effective way to prevent these deaths, but the rates of three key outcomes--ART initiation, retention in care, and long-term ART adherence--remain low. This systematic review synthesized evidence on health systems factors affecting these outcomes in pregnant and postpartum women living with HIV.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25303241 PMCID: PMC4193745 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0108150
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Flow Diagram for Study Search and Inclusion.
Summary of Characteristics of Included Studies.
| Characteristics | Number of studies | |
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| Sub-Saharan Africa | 36 | |
| Asia | 2 | |
| Latin America | 3 | |
| Europe/North America | 1 | |
| Middle East | 0 | |
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| Rural | 15 | |
| Urban | 7 | |
| Both | 15 | |
| Unclear | 5 | |
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| Clinic | 14 | |
| District Hospital | 6 | |
| Tertiary Hospital | 14 | |
| All | 2 | |
| Unknown or N/A | 6 | |
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| Retrospective Record Review | 16 | |
| Prospective Cohort | 8 | |
| Intervention/Evaluation | 5 | |
| Qualitative | 13 | |
| Unclear | 1 | |
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| Range: 7–663,603 Median: 396 | |
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| Initiation | 30 | |
| Retention | 10 | |
| Adherence | 9 | |
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| Yes | 12 | |
| No | 30 | |
*Sum exceeds the total number of studies because some studies were counted in multiple sub-categories.
Indicators of Adherence Used in the Studies.
| Study | Adherence Indicator |
| Awiti | Measure of adherence and type (short/long term, etc.) not noted; duration on ART was between 1 and 6 years, self-reported |
| Ayuo | Measure: disengagement (early disengagement = no contact for any period of 30 or more consecutive days between first antenatal visit and delivery; late disengagement = no contact during the 30 days prior to delivery); self-reported adherence |
| Delvaux | Adherence defined as mother-infant pairs who ingested SD-NVP at recommended time; non-adherence = not ingesting at all or at wrong time |
| Kasenga | Unclear |
| Kirsten | Adherence to combination prophylaxis for PMTCT (AZT at week 28, sdNVP) assessed drug collection, dispensing (pre and postpartum) and ingestion (during delivery/hospitalization) |
| Kuonza | Adherence to sdNVP; non-adherence includes those who did not ingest or those that took at the wrong time; study also looks at infant adherence and combined maternal-infant adherence |
| Mellins | Adherence based on self-report, having taken all doses in two prior days; also asked to report on last missed dose (past week, past two week, past month, past three months, more than three months ago, never) |
| Nassali | Adherence to prenatal PMTCT program measured as proportion of mothers who honored appointments by end of 8 weeks postpartum |
| Peltzer | Adherence to sdNVP; self-reported |
Summary of Key Findings and Underlying Evidence.
| MAJOR THEMES AND KEY FINDINGS | STRENGTH OF THE EVIDENCE | GENERALIZABILITY OF THE EVIDENCE |
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| a) Maternal ART services struggle to retain women in care and involve their partners, especially during the postpartum period and when women are ART-ineligible or have declined ART. |
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| b) Gaps between ANC/PMTCT and HIV services and dropout along the maternal ART cascade are persistent, widespread problems, even when models of care are designed to overcome typical access barriers such as vertical programs, physical distance, wait time, and fears of confidentiality. |
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| c) The design of effective models of care for delivering maternal ART involves many more consideration than the degree of integration. |
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| d) Maternal ART has been under-prioritized in ANC, PMTCT and HIV programs. |
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| a) Dropout from and delays in the maternal ART cascade are exacerbated by a range of communication and coordination problems, including scheduling difficulties, poor follow-up and tracing of patients, weak information systems, and failure to keep up with rapidly changing treatment protocols and referral procedures. |
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| b) Dropout from and delays in the maternal ART cascade are driven by problems in delivering HIV services in the context of ANC programs, including poor access to HIV testing, poor pre-/post-test counseling, lack of POC CD4 testing, and lengthy, rigid or complicated treatment protocols that made caring for sick or late presenting women more difficult. |
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| c) Dropout from and delays in the maternal ART cascade were worsened by weak training and supervision of healthcare workers in the areas of emotional support (both for themselves and their patients) as well as up-to-date information on treatment protocols, referral procedures, and the importance of maternal HIV care. |
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| a) System-wide resource constraints that inhibit the access of those using health services, including human resources shortages and turnover, long waiting times, supply shortages and supply chain problems, and user fees, can pose an even greater barrier to accessing ART for pregnant women. |
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| b) Governance challenges in the broader health system, including centralized resource allocation, poor performance management and weak and fragmented accountability mechanisms, inconsistent payment processes, and the ineffective management use of health information, can exacerbate health service delivery problems at the facility level, especially for the services aimed at HIV-infected pregnant and postpartum women which are already fragmented, inefficient and poorly coordinated. |
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| a) There are many different aspects of the relationship between healthcare workers and HIV-infected pregnant women that have an effect on initiation, retention and adherence to maternal ART, including nature of confidentiality within the relationship, HIV-related stigma, favoritism, unequal power relationships, and perceptions about the healthiness of pregnant women. |
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| b) The success of efforts to initiate and retain HIV-infected pregnant women in ANC and HIV care was shaped by the directness, intensity, frequency, and extension of provider engagement with women. |
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| a) While there may be any number of quick wins for improving outcomes along the maternal ART cascade, effective interventions typically move beyond integrating discrete elements of service delivery, and instead, provide multi-pronged and multi-leveled interventions in the broader health system to support maternal ART initiation, retention and adherence. |
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Figure 2The Maternal ART Cascade.
Considerations for Maternal ART Models of Care.
| ASPECT OF MODEL OF CARE | IMPLICATIONS FOR MATERNAL ART | CROSS-CUTTING ISSUES | ||
| What kind of HIV testing is done, where is it done, and by whom? | Opt out is better for uptake. Lay counselors are more approachable but nurses provide more continuity. There is better continuity if HIV services are part of ANC consultations. |
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| Where is ART assessment and initiation done? | Referral and assessment is better in integrated services, but it is not clear if initiation is better. | |||
| Who is allowed to initiate ART? | The more cadres that can initiate ART, the more flexible and responsive initiation can be. | |||
| How are lab services integrated with ART assessment and initiation services? | Point of Care CD4 testing can speed initiation. | |||
| What mechanisms (record-keeping, appointment systems, peer escorts, etc.) are used to ensure linkage across different services? | More active linkages between services and follow up/tracing (follow up by CHWs) result in fewer drop-outs. | |||
| How are women transferred into and out of adult ART services before and after pregnancy? | For women already on ART, management of ART while pregnant needs to be coordinated with PMTCT program. For these women, and for women not on ART before pregnancy, how they are transferred back to general adult ART services can impact retention and adherence. | |||
| How are the general adult ART services organized? | More decentralized ART services, in general, make linkages between ART and ANC services easier. | |||
| What is the intended pacing of movement through the maternal ART cascade? | Drug readiness, training, PMTCT protocols, and other assumptions built into models of care can greatly increase or decrease the pace of movement through the maternal ART cascade, and thus, opportunities for drop-out. | |||
| Are CHWs, peer mentors or support groups part of the model of care? | These cadres/interventions can provide better psychosocial support for women throughout the cascade, as well as contribute to coordination of and linking across services. | |||
Pregnancy-Related Health Systems Factors.
| PREGNANCY-RELATED HEALTH SYSTEMS BARRIERS AND ENABLERS |
| Challenge of coordinating HIV care for women with their movement into ANC, through the delivery and post-partum phases of care, and back into general adult primary care |
| Loss of focus on pregnant women's health needs in the context of PMTCT programs' focus on preventing vertical transmission |
| The particular blind spot of the postpartum period, when women are transitioning out of ANC and PMTCT care but not are effectively linked to ongoing primary or HIV care |
| Health services that are not set up to respond to the unique health and social needs of pregnant women (e.g. not sitting and waiting all day to be seen, not being viewed (by selves and others) as ‘sick enough’ to warrant focused attention, need for movement across facilities during and after pregnancy to access social support, difficulty in coordinating both ANC and HIV care visits, if separate) |
| Poor knowledge and training among healthcare workers about the importance of maternal ART, maternal ART protocols and maternal ART referral procedures |
| Time-bound nature of pregnancy not sufficiently accounted for in some ART protocols that required lengthy assessment and drug readiness training before initiation |
Recommendations.
| Focal Area | Recommendation |
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| Policymakers and program managers should re-evaluate maternal ART services using the maternal ART cascade and pathways through maternal ART care as organizing frameworks. This re-evaluation should 1) systematically diagnose current bottlenecks and drop-out points in detail, 2) identify the health systems barriers that contribute most to these problems, 3) identify a set of interventions that could sustainably and effectively addresses these problems, and finally, 4) align these priority areas and intervention options with existing HIV and ANC/PMTCT services. |
| Policymakers, program managers and researchers should focus on understanding and addressing delays in progression through the maternal ART cascade. Both monitoring and evaluation processes should include measures of time and its effects more explicitly. | |
| Attention should be renewed on the range of women who never make it to ANC or HIV care or who drop out along the cascade. More information on who they are, why they never access care or why they drop out needs to be collected. Interventions to recruit, retain | |
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| Health management information systems for maternal ART need to be improved. This requires strengthening both the information systems themselves—especially with respect to identifying and tracking patients as they move between different services and levels of care— as well as improving the management and use of health information for resource allocation, intervention design, and accountability. |
| Potential ‘quick wins’ for addressing critical bottlenecks to maternal ART can sometimes be identified and acted on. These could include relaxing treatment protocols to enable initiation of ART at the time of testing regardless of CD4 level, enabling task shifting, queue prioritization, aligning ANC and ART visits, and POC CD4 testing. | |
| Opportunities to increase the directness, intensity, frequency and extension of the health system's engagement with pregnant HIV-infected women should be identified and pursued. This would include not only patient-provider engagement within the health system itself but also strengthening of the facility/community continuum through the development of coordinating and supporting interventions such as peer mentors, community health workers coordinators, support groups, etc. | |
| Effective and sustainable interventions to support maternal ART, however, should be multi-pronged and multi-leveled and seek to make an impact across the cascade at both facility and higher levels of the health system. | |
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| Critical gaps in the evidence base regarding maternal ART include adherence outcomes, and factoring affecting adherence; the role of timeliness and timing as discrete variables; the barriers and enablers for those who never make it to health services and those who drop out, and maternal ART outcomes along the full cascade and using a variety of denominators for different comparative evaluation (e.g. ART program performance with respect to the population in care versus ART program performance with respect to the population in need). |
| Program evaluations using strong, prospective research designs in pragmatic settings should be prioritized in order to better characterize likely maternal ART outcomes and challenges in settings outside small pilot interventions. | |
| Measures of adherence should be standardized to enable comparison across programs and studies. |