| Literature DB >> 28161401 |
Joseph D Tucker1, Lai Sze Tso2, Brian Hall3, Qingyan Ma4, Rachel Beanland5, John Best6, Haochu Li7, Mellanye Lackey8, Gifty Marley9, Zachary C Rich10, Ka-Lon Sou11, Meg Doherty12.
Abstract
Although HIV services are expanding, few have reached the scale necessary to support universal viral suppression of individuals living with HIV. The purpose of this systematic review was to summarize the qualitative evidence evaluating public health HIV interventions to enhance linkage to care, antiretroviral drug (ARV) adherence, and retention in care. We searched 19 databases without language restrictions. The review collated data from three separate qualitative evidence reviews addressing each of the three outcomes along the care continuum. 21,738 citations were identified and 24 studies were included in the evidence review. Among low and middle-income countries in Africa, men living with HIV had decreased engagement in interventions compared to women and this lack of engagement among men also influenced the willingness of their partners to engage in services. Four structural issues (poverty, unstable housing, food insecurity, lack of transportation) mediated the feasibility and acceptability of public health HIV interventions. Individuals living with HIV identified unmet mental health needs that interfered with their ability to access HIV services. Persistent social and cultural factors contribute to disparities in HIV outcomes across the continuum of care, shaping the context of service delivery among important subpopulations.Entities:
Keywords: HIV; Intervention; Public health; Qualitative; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28161401 PMCID: PMC5360566 DOI: 10.1016/j.ebiom.2017.01.036
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EBioMedicine ISSN: 2352-3964 Impact factor: 8.143
Fig. 1PRISMA flow chart of included studies.
Cross-cutting themes.
Overview of studies included in the qualitative evidence synthesis.
| First author | Year | Country | Intervention type | HIV care continuum step(s) | Method | Population |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 | Ethiopia | Task shifting | Adherence, retention | SSI, FGD | 2 hospitals in Amhara region | |
| 2011 | Tanzania | Home-based care | Retention | IDI | Adolescents in rural and urban areas | |
| 2012 | Zimbabwe | Decentralized | Linkage, adherence, retention | SSI | Children with HIV at 1 clinic | |
| 2011 | Malawi | Community-based HIVST | Linkage, Retention | SSI | PLHIV adults at 2 clinics | |
| 2006 | Tanzania | Enhanced referrals | Linkage | IDI, FGD | Rural district | |
| 2011 | Zimbabwe | Peer support for women | Linkage, adherence, retention | IDI | 2 urban districts | |
| 2006 | Nigeria | Home-base care | Linkage, adherence, retention | FGD, IDI | Rural and semi-rural sites | |
| 2010 | Kenya | HIV/pregnancy service intervention | Linkage, retention | SSI | District-level prenatal clinic | |
| 2011 | South Africa | Task shifting | Linkage | FGD | 3 clinics | |
| 2005 | Botswana | Home-based services | Linkage | FGD | Adults in 2 districts | |
| 2009 | India | Peer-led CBO, empowerment | Linkage, adherence | FGD, IDI, EFN | 1 southern state | |
| 2010 | South Africa | Decentralized | Retention | SSI | 2 treatment sites | |
| 2012 | South Africa | Home-based services | Linkage | IDI | Rural adults | |
| 2010 | India | Community-based pilot | Linkage | SSI | Adults at 8 clinics | |
| 2012 | Kenya | Text messaging | Retention | SSI | Adults at 1 clinic | |
| 2012 | South Africa | Home-based services | Linkage | IDI | Rural adults | |
| 2008 | UK | Housing support | Linkage | SSI | Homeless or marginally housed | |
| 2008 | US | Enhanced referrals | Linkage | SSI | Adults at 3 sites | |
| 2002 | US | Case management | Linkage, adherence, retention | IDI | Youth at 5 sites | |
| 2013 | US | Integrated mental health | Adherence | IDI | Adults at 1 urban clinic | |
| 2011 | US | mHealth | Retention | FGD | Adults at urban clinic | |
| 2007 | US | Enhanced referrals | Linkage, retention | SSI | Adults released from prison | |
| 2007 | Canada | Community-based services | Linkage, retention | SSI | Aboriginal youth | |
| 2003 | US | Case management | Adherence, retention | SSI | Adults at 4 sites |
SSI: semi-structured interviews; FGD: focus group discussions; IDI: in-depth interviews; EFN: ethnographic field notes.
Summary of qualitative review findings.
| Review finding | Contributing studies | Confidence in the evidence | Explanation of confidence in the evidence assessment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Participant gender. Among low and middle-income countries in Africa, the HIV-infected individual's gender influenced the uptake of the intervention. Men living with HIV had decreased engagement in HIV care compared to women and also influenced the willingness of their partners to engage HIV services. | High | 4 studies with minor to moderate methodological limitations. Thick data from four African countries, two middle-income countries and low low-income countries. High coherence. | |
| Clinical navigation and service orientation. Some people living with HIV (PLHIV) reported that once they reached the hospital, they were disoriented and encountered challenges accessing clinical care or ARVs. Several HIV interventions that improved clinical navigation were feasible and acceptable to PLHIV. | Moderate | 8 studies with minor to significant methodological limitations. Thick data from 8 countries, half in Africa. High coherence. | |
| Mental health service integration. PLHIV identified unmet mental health needs that interfered with their ability to embrace interventions. Integration of HIV and mental health services improved intervention uptake and engagement in HIV services across the continuum of care. | Moderate | 11 studies with minor methodological limitations. Reasonably thick data from 7 countries, although high-income countries accounted for 7/11 studies. Interventions in middle-income countries were less intensive. High coherence. | |
| Participant socioeconomic status. Individual socioeconomic status mediated intervention effectiveness. People with HIV living in poverty faced greater challenges engaging in interventions. Some HIV-infected individuals did not disclose their serostatus to family and friends, further limiting their access to resources. People living with HIV noted that several projects focused on alleviating poverty were feasible and acceptable in the context of larger HIV interventions. | High | 11 studies with minor methodological limitations. Thick data from 8 countries, predominately low and middle-income countries in Africa. High coherence. | |
| Transportation assistance. Lack of regular transport to clinic appointments and to pick up ARVs was difficult for parents living with HIV and those caring for children living with HIV. Transportation assistance to the clinic and to obtain ARVs increased the feasibility and acceptability of HIV interventions. | High | 13 studies with minor to moderate methodological limitations. Thick data from 9 countries, mostly in low and middle-income countries in Africa. High coherence. | |
| Housing for homeless and marginally housed individuals. Among individuals from high-income countries, housing support delivered as part of the intervention improved linkage and retention in care. Housing support in this subset of PLHIV provided a more stable environment, enhancing the overall intervention. | Moderate | 6 studies with minor methodological limitations. Relatively thick data from three high-income countries in Europe and North America. High coherence. | |
| Food insecurity. Lack of food limited the extent to which PLHIV engaged in interventions and were retained in care. Some PLHIV were unable to have sufficient food to accompany their ARVs, influencing their ARV adherence. Food assistance was a critical determinant of several interventions across the HIV continuum of care. | Moderate | 8 studies with minor to significant methodological limitations. Thick data from seven countries, including three studies from low and middle—income countries in Africa. High coherence. |
The CERQual confidence refers to the overall confidence in the review finding based on assessing components related to relevance, adequacy, coherence, and methodological rigor as described in detail in the methods section.