| Literature DB >> 28406269 |
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Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Multi-disease community health campaigns can be effective for population-wide HIV testing in a research setting (SEARCH: NCT01864603). We sought to evaluate feasibility and uptake of a community-led health campaign (CLHC) planned and implemented by village leaders and local clinic workers in Uganda.Entities:
Keywords: Africa; HIV testing; community health campaign; diabetes; hypertension; mobile testing
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28406269 PMCID: PMC5515014 DOI: 10.7448/IAS.20.1.21514
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int AIDS Soc ISSN: 1758-2652 Impact factor: 5.396
Feasibility metrics and outcomes during implementation of a community-led health campaign in rural Uganda
| Community actor | Feasibility measure | CL-HC feasibility study intervention | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Elected village leaders | Elected leader acceptance & participation in training for pre-campaign and campaign activities | Monthly training led by SEARCH Trial consultants. | All village leaders (N = 8) accepted and participated in training. |
| Elected village leaders | Implementation of pre-campaign community mobilization activities | Peer-to-peer training by elected village leaders from a neighbouring parish that had previously participated in a SEARCH health campaign. | All village leaders designed and implemented community mobilization activities including:
CHC poster placement throughout villages Announcements at places of worship Radio announcements Door-to-door discussions to promote CHC/answer questions within each leader’s village |
| Elected village leaders | Implementation of pre-campaign census enumeration | Training by SEARCH consultants and peer-to-peer training by elected village leaders from a neighbouring parish that had previously participated in a SEARCH study census. | All village leaders implemented a door-to-door census, enumerating 5,202 residents over two weeks in August 2014. |
| Local Ministry of Health clinic staff | Implementation of health screening services, including POC HIV, hypertension, diabetes and malaria screening | Working with clinic director to identify staff with screening service training that could participate in CL-HC. | Active, daily participation by local clinic staff during each of the six CLHC days. MoH clinic provisions (HIV test kits, blood pressure cuffs, etc.) leveraged for CLHC screening |
| Community residents | Participation in CLHC health services | Pre-campaign mobilization activities by locally elected leaders. | 2,753 community residents (53%) participated in 6-day CLHC. HIV testing uptake by 1,474/1,584 (93%) adult campaign participants |
| Local Ministry of Health clinic staff | Measurement of uptake of health screening services, and community testing coverage | Training by SEARCH consultants. | CLHC participants successfully linked back to census enumeration, allowing for measure of campaign coverage Accountability and measurement of all services delivered with logbooks |
Characteristics of census-enumerated residents and community-led campaign participants, and the proportion of the census-enumerated population covered by campaign activities
| Characteristics | All census-enumerated parish residents | Community led health campaign participants | % Population Covered |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total | |||
| 5202 | 2753 | 53% | |
| Agea | |||
| 0–14 years | 2162 (42) | 1037 (38) | 48% |
| 15–50 years | 2650 (51) | 1288 (47) | 49% |
| >50 years | 366 (7) | 296 (11) | 81% |
| Gender | |||
| Female, <15 | 1100 (21) | 512 (19) | 47% |
| Male, <15 | 1062 (20) | 525 (19) | 49% |
| Female, ≥15 | 1629 (31) | 987 (36) | 61% |
| Male, ≥15 | 1387 (27) | 597 (22) | 43% |
a24 census-enumerated residents were missing age data, and 132 CLHC participants were missing age data.
Community-led multi-disease health campaign services provided and screening results during a six-day campaign in rural Uganda
| N | % | |
|---|---|---|
| 2,119 | 77% | |
| Children (<15 years) (N = 585 tested) | 9 | 1.5% |
| Adult (≥15 years) (N = 1,474 tested) | 105 | 7.1% |
| Age not recorded (N = 60 tested) | 2 | 3.3% |
| Males (N = 865 tested) | 36 | 4.2% |
| Females (N = 1240 tested) | 76 | 6.1% |
| Gender unknown (N = 14 tested) | 4 | 28.5% |
| Self-reported fever | 751 | 27.3% |
| Confirmed malaria, if febrile (N = 751 tested) | 40 | 5.3% |
| Age≤10 years (N = 428) | 24 | 5.6% |
| Age>10 years (N = 295) | 12 | 4.1% |
| Age unknown (N = 28) | 4 | 14.3% |
| Systolic ≥140 or Diastolic ≥90 mmHg | 271 | 18.7% |
| 116 | 21.5% | |
| 155 | 17% | |
| Random blood glucose ≥11.1 mmol/L | 18 | 2.8% |
| 6 | 2.4% | |
| 12 | 2.9% | |
| 107 | 3.9% | |
| 6–12 months (N = 54) | 33 | 61% |
| 12 months-5 years (N = 420) | 419 | 99.7% |
| 543 | 78% | |
| Total number accepted same-day referral for FP | 25 | 2.8% |
| Number received implants | 23 | 2.6% |
| Number received IUD | 2 | 0.2% |
| 91 | 11.3% |
Overall costs and costs scaled-up to reflect Ministry of Health standard rates using a community-led health campaign approach
| Observed Census and Campaign | Scaled-up replication | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Category of expenses | Overall costs (incl. SEARCH supported) | SEARCH- supported | Overall costs |
| Personnel (i.e. coordinator, counsellors, lab tech) | $6,337.84 | $3,402.40 | $944.34 |
| Goods (i.e. HIV tests, drug treatments, timers, flyers) | $12,741.76 | $2,138.97 | $12,552.16 |
| Services (i.e. transportation and fuel, catered meals) | $4,291.31 | $815.47 | $2,639.46 |
| Capital Goods (i.e. laptops, tents, chairs) | $225.65 | $225.65 | $192.24 |