| Literature DB >> 27930740 |
Rena C Patel1, Josephine Odoyo2, Keerthana Anand3, Gaelen Stanford-Moore4, Imeldah Wakhungu2, Elizabeth A Bukusi2,5, Jared M Baeten6, Joelle M Brown7.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The World Health Organization now recommends antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation for all HIV-infected individuals regardless of CD4 cell count or disease status. Understanding the facilitators and barriers to initiation of and adherence to ART is essential to successful scale-up of "universal" ART.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27930740 PMCID: PMC5145201 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0168057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Baseline characteristics of participants.
| Variable | HIV-infected and eligible for ART(n = 33) |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | 32 (23–37) |
| Gender | |
| Female | 24 (73%) |
| Male | 9 (27%) |
| Married | 31 (94%) |
| Number of living children | 1 (1–3) |
| Number of living children with study partner | 0 (0–2) |
| Ethnicity | |
| Luo | 31 (94%) |
| Luhya | 2 (6%) |
| Kalenjin | 0 |
| Years of schooling completed | 8 (7–12) |
| Monthly income for participant | 20 USD |
| Number of years cohabitating with study partner | 2 (1–6.3) |
| Number of months HIV-discordant status known | 1 (1–1, range 1–13) |
| Number of months since first positive HIV test | 9.5 (6.4–12.8) |
| Initiated ART during study | 23 (70%) |
| Study partner on PrEP | 22 (67%) |
| CD4 cell count (cells/μL) | 305 (233–431) |
| Viral load (copies/mL) | 71,174 (23,728–245,278) |
| WHO stage | |
| Stage 1 | 24 (73%) |
| Stage 2 | 9 (27%) |
| Stage 3 | 0 |
| Stage 4 | 0 |
N (%) for categorical variables; Median (IQR) for continuous variables
*Conversion rate of 1KSh = 0.0098 USD used
Facilitators and barriers to initiating ART among serodiscordant couples.
| Theme categories | Themes | |
|---|---|---|
| ■ Initiating ART facilities living a longer and healthier life | ||
| ■ Use of ART prevents HIV transmission to partners or infants, and helps continue their relationships | ||
| ■ Allows infected individuals to appear normal or healthy in order to avoid disclosure, stigma, and discrimination | ||
| ■ Perceived opposition from the community or religious groups | ||
| ■ Denial about HIV positive diagnosis | ||
| ■ Stigma and fear of disclosure of HIV status | ||
| ■ Avoiding perceived or known side effects of ART use | ||
| ■ Lack of information and counseling | ||
| ■ Anticipated logistical or health systems barriers and related disclosure issues | ||
| ■ Characteristics of current ART formulations | ||
| ■ Perceived requirement of a special diet |