Literature DB >> 26702362

A pre-post pilot study of peer nutritional counseling and food insecurity and nutritional outcomes among antiretroviral therapy patients in Honduras.

Kathryn P Derose1, Melissa Felician2, Bing Han1, Kartika Palar3, Blanca Ramírez4, Hugo Farías5, Homero Martínez6.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Food insecurity and poor nutrition are key barriers to anti-retroviral therapy (ART) adherence. Culturally-appropriate and sustainable interventions that provide nutrition counseling for people on ART and of diverse nutritional statuses are needed, particularly given rising rates of overweight and obesity among people living with HIV (PLHIV).
METHODS: As part of scale-up of a nutritional counseling intervention, we recruited and trained 17 peer counselors from 14 government-run HIV clinics in Honduras to deliver nutritional counseling to ART patients using a highly interactive curriculum that was developed after extensive formative research on locally available foods and dietary patterns among PLHIV. All participants received the intervention; at baseline and 2 month follow-up, assessments included: 1) interviewer-administered, in-person surveys to collect data on household food insecurity (15-item scale), nutritional knowledge (13-item scale), dietary intake and diversity (number of meals and type and number of food groups consumed in past 24 hours); and 2) anthropometric measures (body mass index or BMI, mid-upper arm and waist circumferences). We used multivariable linear regression analysis to examine changes pre-post in food insecurity and the various nutritional outcomes while controlling for baseline characteristics and clinic-level clustering.
RESULTS: Of 482 participants at baseline, we had complete follow-up data on 356 (74%), of which 62% were women, median age was 39, 34% reported having paid work, 52% had completed primary school, and 34% were overweight or obese. In multivariate analyses adjusting for gender, age, household size, work status, and education, we found that between baseline and follow-up, household food insecurity decreased significantly among all participants (β=-0.47, p<.05) and among those with children under 18 (β=-1.16, p<.01), while nutritional knowledge and dietary intake and diversity also significantly improved, (β=0.88, p<.001; β=0.30, p<.001; and β=0.15, p<.001, respectively). Nutritional status (BMI, mid-arm and waist circumferences) showed no significant changes, but the brief follow-up period may not have been sufficient to detect changes.
CONCLUSIONS: A peer-delivered nutritional counseling intervention for PLHIV was associated with improvements in dietary quality and reduced food insecurity among a population of diverse nutritional statuses. Future research should examine if such an intervention can improve adherence among people on ART.

Entities:  

Keywords:  HIV; food insecurity; lay health workers; nutritional counseling

Year:  2015        PMID: 26702362      PMCID: PMC4686157          DOI: 10.1186/s40795-015-0017-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Nutr        ISSN: 2055-0928


  37 in total

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3.  Repeated assessments of food security predict CD4 change in the setting of antiretroviral therapy.

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6.  Food insecurity as a barrier to sustained antiretroviral therapy adherence in Uganda.

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2.  Developing Pilot Interventions to Address Food Insecurity and Nutritional Needs of People Living With HIV in Latin America and the Caribbean: An Interinstitutional Approach Using Formative Research.

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6.  Preliminary Effects of an Urban Gardens and Peer Nutritional Counseling Intervention on HIV Treatment Adherence and Detectable Viral Load Among People with HIV and Food Insecurity: Evidence from a Pilot Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial in the Dominican Republic.

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7.  Perceptions and determinants of healthy eating for people with HIV in the Dominican Republic who experience food insecurity.

Authors:  Deshira D Wallace; Denise D Payán; Amarilis Then-Paulino; Gabriela Armenta; María Altagracia Fulcar; Ramón Acevedo; Kathryn P Derose
Journal:  Public Health Nutr       Date:  2020-08-24       Impact factor: 4.539

8.  Household Food Insecurity in Southeastern Iran: Severity and Related Factors.

Authors:  Zinat Mortazavi; Ahmad Reza Dorosty; Mohammad Reza Eshraghian; Mohtasham Ghaffari; Alireza Ansari-Moghaddam; Mahdi Mohammadi
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9.  Nutrition Interventions Integrated into an Existing Maternal, Neonatal, and Child Health Program Reduce Food Insecurity Among Recently Delivered and Pregnant Women in Bangladesh.

Authors:  Edward A Frongillo; Phuong H Nguyen; Tina Sanghvi; Zeba Mahmud; Bachera Aktar; Silvia Alayon; Purnima Menon
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10.  Experience of nutritional counselling in a nutritional programme in HIV care in the Tigray region of Ethiopia using the socio-ecological model.

Authors:  Fisaha Haile Tesfay; Anna Ziersch; Lillian Mwanri; Sara Javanparast
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  10 in total

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