| Literature DB >> 26615587 |
G Abongomera1,2, S Kiwuwa-Muyingo3, P Revill4, L Chiwaula5, T Mabugu6, A Phillips7, E Katabira8, V Musiime9,10, C Gilks11,12, A Chan13,14, J Hakim15, R Colebunders16, C Kityo17, D M Gibb18, J Seeley19,20, D Ford21.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Decentralization of ART services scaled up significantly with the country wide roll out of option B plus in Uganda. Little work has been undertaken to examine population level access to HIV care particularly in hard to reach areas in rural Africa. Most work on ART scale up has been done at health facility level which omits people not accessing healthcare in the community. This study describes health service usage, particularly HIV testing and care in 2/6 parishes of Lapono sub-county of northern Uganda, prior to introduction of ART services in Lira Kato Health Centre (a local lower-level health centre III), as part of ART decentralization.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26615587 PMCID: PMC4662831 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-015-1194-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1Map of Lapono sub-county, dots indicate villages included in the survey (village 1 = pilot)
Percent distribution of household characteristics in the UDHS 2011 and the current survey
| Characteristic | UDHS 2011 | Survey | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Urban | Rural | ||
|
|
|
| |
| Household Headshipb | |||
| Male | 69.0 | 70.8 | 456 (61.5) |
| Female | 31.0 | 29.2 | 286 (38.5) |
| Main water sourcec | |||
| River | NA | NA | 2 (0.1) |
| Well/Spring | 12.5 | 28.4 | 10 (0.7) |
| Borehole | 11.8 | 43.9 | 1370 (97.9) |
| Rain catchment | 0.5 | 1.4 | 1 (0.1) |
| Water tap in house/plot | 27.9 | 1.5 | 0 (0.0) |
| Trench | NA | NA | 8 (0.6) |
| Dam | NA | NA | 9 (0.6) |
| Stand pipe/public tap | 38.9 | 8.2 | NA |
| Bottle water | 4.6 | 0.4 | NA |
| Tanker truck/vendor | 2.2 | 0.9 | NA |
| Surface water | 1.0 | 14.6 | NA |
| Other | 0.6 | 0.8 | NA |
| Toilet | |||
| Pit latrine | 67.4 | 83.4 | 501 (35.8) |
| VIP latrine | 18.6 | 4.2 | 12 (0.9) |
| Flush toilet | 11.3 | 0.3 | 0 (0.0) |
| Other toilet | 0.8 | 0.6 | 4 (0.3) |
| Toilet type not specified | 0.0 | 0.0 | 20 (1.4) |
| No facility | 1.8 | 11.5 | 864 (61.7) |
| Predominant Lightingd | |||
| Electricity | 55.9 | 3.9 | 11 (0.8) |
| Paraffin lantern/Candle | 35.4 | 86.7 | 1339 (96.3) |
| Wax candle | 5.8 | 2.0 | 5 (0.4) |
| Others | 3.0 | 7.5 | 36 (2.6) |
| Household Possessions | |||
| Mosquito Net | 80.9 | 72.4 | 844 (60.8) |
| Radio | 71.8 | 64.6 | 349 (25.0) |
| Television | 45.0 | 4.9 | 4 (0.3) |
| Mobile phone | 86.8 | 53.1 | 395 (28.3) |
| Means of transport | |||
| Bicycle | 19.5 | 41.1 | 497 (35.6) |
| Motorcycle | 11.4 | 7.1 | 42 (3.0) |
| Car/truck | 10.1 | 1.6 | 3 (0.2) |
aFor the PBS numbers and percentages of households are provided. Where numbers do not sum to total, this is due to missing data. Percentages are of non-missing data
Not all participants interviewed for the PBS household questionnaire were heads of household and this information is only available if the head of household was interviewed
cThe choices for water source did not completely overlap between the 2 surveys. NA indicates the choice was not available and zero indicates it was available but not selected
dTaken from Uganda AIDS Indicator Survey, 2011 [2] as not available in the UDHS Survey [17]
Socio-demographic characteristics of the study participants
| Characteristic | Men | Women | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
| |
| Age | |||
| ≤ 19 | 208 (27.6) | 298 (21.8) | 506 (23.9) |
| 20–29 | 195 (25.9) | 416 (30.4) | 611 (28.8) |
| 30–39 | 194 (25.8) | 384 (28.1) | 578 (27.3) |
| 40–49 | 108 (14.3) | 169 (12.4) | 277 (13.0) |
| 50+ | 48 (6.4) | 100 (7.3) | 148 (7.0) |
| Highest level of Education | |||
| None | 44 (5.8) | 520 (38.2) | 564 (26.6) |
| Pre-primary/Some primary | 387 (51.3) | 670 (49.2) | 1057 (49.9) |
| Completed primary | 104 (13.8) | 93 (6.8) | 197 (9.3) |
| Some secondary | 142 (18.8) | 63 (4.6) | 205 (9.7) |
| Completed secondary | 25 (3.3) | 10 (0.7) | 35 (1.7) |
| Higher Education/Vocational | 53 (7.0) | 7 (0.5) | 60 (2.8) |
| Source of Livelihood1 | |||
| Subsistence crop grower | 710 (94.0) | 1336 (97.6) | 2046 (96.3) |
| Cash crop grower | 322 (42.6) | 573 (41.2) | 895 (42.1) |
| Livestock farmer | 309 (40.9) | 476 (34.8) | 785 (37.0) |
| Brick Maker | 97 (12.8) | 4 (0.3) | 101 (4.8) |
| Alcohol brewing | 0 (0.0) | 724 (52.9) | 724 (34.1) |
| Petty/retail business | 68 (9.0) | 192 (14.0) | 260 (12.2) |
| Others | 191 (25.3) | 127 (9.3) | 310 (14.6) |
| Current Partnership | |||
| Married | 493 (65.3) | 1000 (73.0) | 1493 (70.3) |
| Living with partner as if married | 10 (1.3) | 18 (1.3) | 28 (1.3) |
| Never married | 232 (30.7) | 179 (13.1) | 411 (19.4) |
| Widow/widower | 6 (0.8) | 109 (8.0) | 115 (5.4) |
| Separated/Divorced | 14 (1.9) | 63 (4.6) | 77 (3.6) |
Data are n (%). Where numbers do not sum to total this is due to missing data. Percentages are of non-missing data
1Individuals were able to report >1 source of livelihood
Usage of health facilities by study participants for non-HIV services
| Healthcare facility | Facility normally visited for fever | Facility visited for last serious sickness |
|---|---|---|
|
|
| |
| Kalongo hospital | 44 (2.1) | 265 (24.1) |
| Patongo HC III | 2 (0.1) | 0 (0) |
| Lira Kato HC III | 1073 (50.6) | 441 (40.1) |
| Health centre II in sub-county | 978 (46.1) | 321 (29.2) |
| Other hospital/HC | 13 (0.6) | 31 (2.8) |
| Local private clinic | 12 (0.6) | 31 (2.8) |
| Traditional healers/herbalist | 0 (0.0) | 12 (1.1) |
Data are n (%) of participants
aMissing data for 2 participants
b23 participants reported a serious sickness requiring medical care in the previous 12 months but facility missing
Reported time taken for roundtrip on foot to facility for a fever including consultation time
| Healthcare facility | Proportion travelling on foota | Time taken for roundtrip on foot to facility in hours | Reported distance in kilometres (one way) by those who walked |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median (IQR) | Median (IQR) | ||
| Kalongo hospital | 21/43 (49 %) | 10 (9–12) | 12 (9–15) |
| Patongo HC III | 1/2 (50 %) | 10.5 | 6 |
| Lira Kato HC III | 1043/1071 (97 %) | 5 (3–6) | 1 (0.5–2) |
| Health centre II in sub-county | 962/977 (98 %) | 4 (3–5) | 1 (0.8–2) |
| Other hospital/HC | 11/12 (92 %) | 4 (3–6) | 1 (0.5–3) |
| Local private clinic | 10/12 (83 %) | 1 (0.5–1.5) | 1 (0.5–2) |
aWhere denominators are less than total in Table 3 this is due to missing data. Percentages are of non-missing data
Knowledge about HIV and HIV prevention practice
| HIV Knowledge and Prevention Practices | Men | Women | Test for difference by sexc | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| ||||||
| Yes | No | Don’t know/not sure | Yes | No | Don’t know/not sure | ||
| Have you heard of HIV or AIDS? | 739 (97.9) | 16 (2.1) | 1361 (99.4) | 8 (0.6) | 0.003 | ||
| Ways of transmitting HIV/AIDSa | |||||||
| Can be transmitted by sex with someone who looks healthy | 628 (83.3) | 63 (8.4) | 63 (8.4) | 1084 (79.2) | 122 (8.9) | 162 (11.8) | 0.03 |
| Can’t be transmitted by mosquito or other insect bites | 480 (63.8) | 173 (23.0) | 100 (13.3) | 638 (46.6) | 435 (31.8) | 295 (21.6) | <0.001 |
| Can’t be transmitted by bewitchment/curses or supernatural means | 652 (86.6) | 34 (4.5) | 67 (8.9) | 1159 (84.9) | 56 (4.1) | 151 (11.1) | 0.28 |
| Can’t be transmitted by sharing food with HIV infected person | 656 (87.1) | 36 (4.8) | 61 (8.1) | 1141 (83.4) | 82 (6.0) | 145 (10.6) | 0.03 |
| Can be transmitted by having sex without condom | 726 (96.6) | 4 (0.5) | 21 (2.8) | 1338 (98.0) | 11 (0.8) | 17 (1.2) | 0.08 |
| Knowledge about PMTCTa | |||||||
| HIV can be transmitted to child during pregnancy | 330 (43.7) | 298 (39.5) | 127 (16.8) | 544 (39.7) | 537 (39.2) | 288 (21.0) | 0.08 |
| HIV can be transmitted to child during delivery | 670 (88.7) | 22 (2.9) | 63 (8.3) | 1265 (92.4) | 34 (2.5) | 70 (5.1) | 0.005 |
| HIV can be transmitted to child during breastfeeding | 653 (86.5) | 23 (3.1) | 79 (10.5) | 1248 (91.2) | 30 (2.2) | 91 (6.7) | 0.001 |
| Do you practise any HIV prevention methods?b | 723 (97.8) | 16 (2.1) | 1347 (99.0) | 14 (1.0) | 0.04 | ||
| HIV prevention practices usedb | |||||||
| Abstinence | 260 (35.2) | 477 (64.6) | 1 (0.1) | 478 (35.2) | 880 (64.7) | 2 (0.2) | 0.99 |
| Faithfulness | 510 (69.0) | 226 (30.6) | 3 (0.4) | 1044 (76.7) | 316 (23.2) | 1 (0.1) | <0.001 |
| Condom use | 368 (49.8) | 371 (50.2) | 0 (0.0) | 262 (19.3) | 1097 (80.7) | 1 (0.1) | <0.001 |
| Circumcision | 21 (2.9) | 685 (92.8) | 32 (4.3) | 5 (0.4) | 1073 (78.8) | 283 (20.8) | <0.001 |
| Others | 123 (18.5) | 451 (67.9) | 90 (13.6) | 180 (14.3) | 828 (66.8) | 231 (18.6) | 0.02 |
Data are n (%) of participants
aFor all questions covering knowledge of modes of HIV transmission, a “yes” indicates correct knowledge. Participants who had not heard of HIV/AIDS (n = 24) were included under “don’t know/not sure”
bParticipants who had not heard of HIV/AIDS (n = 24) were not asked about HIV prevention practice
cTest for difference compares yes vs. no/don’t know/not sure by logit random effects model
Fig. 2Care and treatment of self-reported HIV-infected adults identified in the survey. *3 patients at Kalongo hospital were on ART but not on CTX; remaining individuals were on CTX and ART. All percentages are of the total 136 HIV-positive individuals