| Literature DB >> 27439397 |
Peter Cherutich1,2, Matthew Golden3, Bourke Betz3, Beatrice Wamuti4, Anne Ng'ang'a5, Peter Maingi4, Paul Macharia5, Betsy Sambai4, Felix Abuna4, David Bukusi4, Mathew Dunbar3, Carey Farquhar3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The utilization of routine health information systems (HIS) for surveillance of assisted partner services (aPS) for HIV in sub-Saharan is sub-optimal, in part due to poor data quality and limited use of information technology. Consequently, little is known about coverage, scope and quality of HIV aPS. Yet, affordable electronic data tools, software and data transmission infrastructure are now widely accessible in sub-Saharan Africa.Entities:
Keywords: Assisted partner services; HIV; Health information; Kenya; Open data kit; Surveillance
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27439397 PMCID: PMC4955244 DOI: 10.1186/s12911-016-0337-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Fig. 1Schematic for electronic data collection, transmission and storage
Socio-demographic, behavioural and biological characteristics of clients, by county, in 18 HTC clinics in Kenya (N = 4351 unless otherwise specified)
| Total ( | Kiambu ( | Kisumu ( | Muranga ( | Nairobi ( | Siaya ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age(mean,sd) | 30.1(9.7) | 30.1(9.5) | 30.1(11.0) | 30.6(10.7) | 30.2(8.9) | 29.0(10.0) |
| Sex (Female ( | 2447(56.2) | 494(60.0) | 551(53.2) | 73(64.6) | 1091(55.6) | 238(57.5) |
| Testing Strategy ( | ||||||
| Client-Initiated | 2567(59.0) | 442(53.6) | 470(45.4) | 62(54.9) | 1363(69.4) | 230(55.6) |
| Provider Initiated | 1784(41.0) | 382(46.4) | 566(54.6) | 51(45.1) | 601(30.6) | 184(44.4) |
| Facility Testing Venue ( | ||||||
| Integrated VCT clinic | 2516(63.3) | 733(90.6) | 379(47.0) | 62(56.9) | 1157(60.9) | 185(52.1) |
| General outpatient | 1246(31.3) | 57(7.1) | 375(46.5) | 38(34.9) | 630(33.2) | 146(41.1) |
| Others | 216(5.4) | 19(2.3) | 52(6.5) | 9(8.2) | 112(5.9) | 24(6.8) |
| Currently pregnant ( | 159(6.5) | 17(3.4) | 22(4.0) | 17(23.3) | 83(7.6) | 20(8.4) |
| Uncircumcised ( | 375(19.7) | 10(3.0) | 158(32.6) | 1(2.5) | 127(14.6) | 79(44.9) |
| Married Monogamous ( | 1994(45.8) | 380(46.2) | 525(50.7) | 49(43.4) | 814(41.5) | 226(54.6) |
| HIV-infected ( | 616(14.2) | 55(6.7) | 171(16.6) | 5(4.4) | 306(15.7) | 79(19.1) |
| Tested as couples ( | 720(16.6) | 98(11.9) | 192(18.6) | 28(24.8) | 345(17.7) | 57(13.8) |
| HIV-infected not screened for TB | 108(17.5) | 0(0.0) | 71(41.5) | N/A | 24(7.8) | 13(16.4) |
± N = 2447, only women. ◻ N = 1904, only men. § N = 4332, only couples
Fig. 2Reasons for HIV Testing for HIV (N = 4351)a. aOther category includes re- testing by HIV-infected persons (N = 36), testing as requirement for marriage, travel or insurance (N = 14) and testing for marriage or separation (N = 21). These are in addition to other reasons for testing
Socio-demographic characteristics, and HIV testing behaviors of HIV-infected clients, by county, in 18 HTC clinics in Kenya (N = 616 unless otherwise specified)
| Total ( | Kiambu ( | Kisumu ( | Muranga ( | Nairobi( | Siaya(79) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age(mean,sd) | 32.5(9.1) | 32.3(6.9) | 32.0(9.5) | 38.2(4.8) | 33.0(9.2) | 31.7(8.9) |
| Sex (Female (N (%)) | 370(60.1) | 37(67.3) | 98(57.3) | 5(100.0) | 1891(61.8) | 41(51.9) |
| Testing Strategy (N (%)) | ||||||
| Client-Initiated | 291(47.2) | 23(41.8) | 60(35.1) | 1(20.0) | 165(53.9) | 42(53.2) |
| Provider Initiated | 325(52.8) | 32(58.2) | 111(64.9) | 4(80.0) | 141(46.1) | 37(46.8) |
| Testing Venue± (N (%)) | ||||||
| Integrated VCT clinic | 291(57.2) | 36(70.6) | 44(38.3) | 3(60.0) | 175(61.2) | 33(63.5) |
| General outpatient | 185(36.4) | 11(21.6) | 57(49.6) | 2(40.0) | 98(34.3) | 17(32.7) |
| Others | 33(6.4) | 4(7.8) | 14(12.1) | 0(0.0) | 13(4.5) | 2(3.8) |
| Testing as Couple | 94(15.3) | 9(16.4) | 22(12.9) | 0(0.0) | 50(16.3) | 13(16.5) |
| Has HIV-negative partner (N (%))± | 45(47.9) | 7(77.8) | 10(45.5) | 0(0.0) | 25(50.0) | 3(23.1) |
±Among those testing at health facility (n = 509). ±Among those testing as couples (n = 88)
Fig. 3Plot indicating proportion newly tested for HIV and newly diagnosed over 12 months
Fig. 4Electronic data capture times, in minutes