| Literature DB >> 29843667 |
Iyiola Faturiyele1, Dimitris Karletsos1, Keletso Ntene-Sealiete2, Alfred Musekiwa3, Mantiti Khabo1, Marethabile Mariti1, Phetole Mahasha4, Thembisile Xulu4, Pedro T Pisa4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: HIV treatment and care for migrants is affected by their mobility and interaction with HIV treatment programs and health care systems in different countries. To assess healthcare needs, preferences and accessibility barriers of HIV-infected migrant populations in high HIV burden, borderland districts of Lesotho.Entities:
Keywords: ART; HIV care and treatment; Lesotho; Migrants; Multi month scripting and dispensing; South Africa
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29843667 PMCID: PMC5975397 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-018-5594-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Map of Lesotho showing 15 health facilities included in HIV-infected migrant survey, 2016
Sample distribution for HIV-infected migrants enrolled in the study, by site, Lesotho, 2016
| District | Location | Health Facility | Patients on ART N | Surveyed N (%) | Migrants N (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leribe | Rural | Matlameng H/C | 315 | 30 (9.5) | 7 (23.3) |
| Leribe | Rural | Pontmain H/C | 1337 | 119 (8.9) | 50 (42.0) |
| Leribe | Rural | Seshote H/C | 1136 | 70 (6.2) | 11 (15.7) |
| Leribe | Urban | Maputsoe Filter Clinic | 2074 | 347 (16.7) | 100 (28.8) |
| Leribe | Urban | Maputsoe SDA H/C | 1539 | 260 (16.9) | 15 (5.8) |
| Mafeteng | Rural | Matelile H/C | 667 | 99 (14.8) | 10 (10.1) |
| Mafeteng | Rural | Ts’akholo H/C | 591 | 235 (39.8) | 24 (10.2) |
| Mafeteng | Urban | Mafeteng Hospital | 3277 | 424 (12.9) | 90 (21.2) |
| Maseru | Rural | Nazareth H/C | 1960 | 441 (22.5) | 26 (5.9) |
| Maseru | Rural | Scott Hospital | 1239 | 136 (11.0) | 16 (11.8) |
| Maseru | Urban | Domiciliary H/C | 1550 | 28 (1.8) | 28 (100)a |
| Maseru | Rural | Paki H/C | 1185 | 61 (5.1) | 52 (85.2)a |
| Maseru | Urban | RLDF H/C | 1247 | 243 (19.5) | 34 (14.0) |
| Maseru | Rural | St Joseph Hospital | 1399 | 13 (0.9) | 13 (100)a |
| Maseru | Urban | Thamae H/C | 2178 | 278 (12.8) | 48 (17.3) |
| TOTAL |
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|
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aH/C – Health Care; At Domiciliary H/C and St Joseph Hospital, surveys were administered only to self-reported migrants; At Paki H/C the same held true, except for the last three days of data collection
Socio-demographics of HIV-infected Lesotho migrants by location
| Characteristic | All N (col %) | Urban N (col %) | Rural N (col %) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patients | 524 | 315 | 209 | |
| Sex | 0.047 | |||
| Men | 150 (28.6) | 101 (32.0) | 49 (23.4) | |
| Women | 344 (65.7) | 199 (63.2) | 145 (69.4) | |
| Unknown | 30 (5.7) | 15 (4.8) | 15 (7.2) | |
| Age (years) | 0.585 | |||
| 18–25 | 38 (7.3) | 20 (6.3) | 18 (8.6) | |
| 26–35 | 173 (33.0) | 105 (33.3) | 68 (32.5) | |
| 36–45 | 202 (38.6) | 121 (38.4) | 81 (38.8) | |
| 46–55 | 71 (13.5) | 42 (13.3) | 29 (13.9) | |
| 55+ | 17 (3.2) | 13 (4.1) | 4 (1.9) | |
| Unknown | 23 (4.4) | 14 (4.4) | 9 (4.3) | |
| Occupation | < 0.001 | |||
| Domestic worker | 240 (45.8) | 117 (37.1) | 123 (58.9) | |
| Construction worker | 87 (16.6) | 60 (19.0) | 27 (12.9) | |
| Textile worker | 52 (9.9) | 43 (13.7) | 9 (4.3) | |
| Farmer | 24 (4.6) | 19 (6.0) | 5 (2.4) | |
| Miner | 23 (4.4) | 9 (2.9) | 14 (6.7) | |
| Health-care professional | 2 (0.4) | 2 (0.6) | 0 (0.0) | |
| Student | 6 (1.1) | 3 (1.0) | 3 (1.4) | |
| Other occupation | 49 (9.4) | 32 (10.2) | 17 (8.1) | |
| Unknown | 41 (7.8) | 30 (9.5) | 11 (5.3) |
*P-value excludes unknown
Socio-demographics of HIV-infected Lesotho migrants by defaulting status
| Characteristic | All N | Defaulted N (row %) | Not defaulted N (row%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| All patients* | 517 | 126 | 391 | |
| Location | 0.011 | |||
| Rural | 206 | 38 (18.4) | 168 (81.6) | |
| Urban | 311 | 88 (28.3) | 223 (71.7) | |
| District | < 0.001 | |||
| Leribe | 181 | 34 (18.8) | 147 (81.2) | |
| Mafeteng | 123 | 49 (39.8) | 74 (60.2) | |
| Maseru | 213 | 43 (20.2) | 170 (79.8) | |
| Sex | 0.567 | |||
| Men | 148 | 35 (23.6) | 113 (76.4) | |
| Women | 341 | 89 (26.1) | 252 (73.9) | |
| Unknown | 28 | 2 (7.1) | 26 (92.9) | |
| Age (years) | 0.081 | |||
| 18–25 | 37 | 3 (8.1) | 34 (91.9) | |
| 26–35 | 172 | 45 (26.2) | 127 (73.8) | |
| 36–45 | 200 | 53 (26.5) | 147 (73.5) | |
| 46–55 | 70 | 19 (27.1) | 51 (72.9) | |
| 55+ | 17 | 2 (11.8) | 15 (88.2) | |
| Unknown | 21 | 4 (19.0) | 17 (81.0) | |
| Occupation | 0.322 | |||
| Domestic worker | 238 | 67 (28.1) | 171 (71.9) | |
| Construction worker | 85 | 21 (24.7) | 64 (75.3) | |
| Textile worker | 52 | 15 (28.8) | 37 (71.2) | |
| Farmer | 23 | 5 (21.7) | 18 (78.3) | |
| Miner | 23 | 4 (17.4) | 19 (82.6) | |
| Health-care professional | 2 | 2 (100.0) | 0 (0.0) | |
| Student | 6 | 1 (16.7) | 5 (83.3) | |
| Other occupation | 49 | 9 (18.4) | 40 (81.6) | |
| Unknown | 39 | 2 (5.1) | 37 (94.9) |
*7 had no default status, ** P-value excludes unknown
Fig. 2Reasons for defaulting ART amongst HIV infected Lesotho migrants
Barriers to getting ART in SA among Lesotho migrations
| Barrier | N | % |
|---|---|---|
| Cannot afford transport costs | 187 | 35.7 |
| Do not know where to get ARVs | 124 | 23.7 |
| No barrier | 174 | 33.2 |
| Afraid if not legally registered in South Africa | 101 | 19.3 |
| Feel discriminated as foreigner | 83 | 15.8 |
| Refused health services | 45 | 8.6 |
| Afraid medications confiscated at the border | 44 | 8.4 |
| ARVs regimen not available at facility | 32 | 6.1 |
| Have to pay for health services | 31 | 5.9 |
Fig. 3Preferred months of ARV’s refills amongst HIV infected Lesotho migrants