| Literature DB >> 27990579 |
Yuri A Amirkhanian1,2, Jeffrey A Kelly3, Wayne J DiFranceisco3, Anna V Kuznetsova4, Sergey S Tarima3, Alexey A Yakovlev4, Vladimir B Musatov4.
Abstract
Over 1 million HIV infections have been diagnosed in Russia, and HIV care uptake and viral suppression are very low. 241 HIV-positive individuals in St. Petersburg were enrolled through social networks, provided blood for viral load testing, and completed measures of medication-taking adherence, readiness, and self-efficacy; psychosocial well-being; and substance use. Outcomes included attending an HIV care appointment in the past 6 months, >90% ART adherence, and undetectable viral load. 26% of participants had no recent care appointment, 18% had suboptimal adherence, and 56% had detectable viral load. Alcohol use consistently predicted all adverse health outcomes. Having no recent care visit was additionally associated with being single and greater past-month drug injection frequency. Poor adherence was additionally predicted by lower medication-taking self-efficacy and lower anxiety. Detectable viral load was additionally related to younger age. Comprehensive interventions to improve HIV care in Russia must address substance abuse, anxiety, and medication-taking self-efficacy.Entities:
Keywords: HIV care linkage and retention; HIV medical care; HIV services; HIV-positive; Persons living with HIV; Russia
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Year: 2018 PMID: 27990579 PMCID: PMC5476511 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-016-1638-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165