| Literature DB >> 30629648 |
Ingrid Eshun-Wilson1,2, Anke Rohwer1, Lynn Hendricks1, Sandy Oliver3,4, Paul Garner5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART) and long-term uninterrupted engagement in HIV care is difficult for HIV-positive people, and randomized trials of specific techniques to promote adherence often show small or negligible effects. Understanding what influences decision-making in HIV-positive people in Africa may help researchers and policy makers in the development of broader, more effective interventions and policies.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30629648 PMCID: PMC6328200 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0210408
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1PRISMA flow diagram.
a Sampled studies include those characterized as (1) conducted in Africa, and ‘thick’, or (2) ‘thin’ and belonging to specific population group of interest: A ‘thick’ study was defined according to the depth of analysis which included the following features: 1) the extent to which the authors transformed/analysed their findings, 2) insight into perspectives was demonstrated, 3) richness and complexity had been portrayed, and 4) there was theoretical or conceptual development. “Thin” studies were all other studies not classified as ‘thick’. Specific population of interest studies included those classified as thin but that evaluated perspectives which were of special interest for the review, including; provider perspectives, MSM populations, sex-worker populations; PWID populations; youth being transferred to new facilities; or conducted among refugee populations. bData saturation was reached.
Characteristics of included studies.
| Study | Country | Phenomenon of interest | Data collection methods | Study participants |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Appelbaum Belisle 2015 | South Africa | Concurrent use of traditional African medicine and ART | In-depth interviews and focus group discussions | HIV positive adults, health workers, HIV counsellors, traditional healers |
| Asgary 2014 | Ethiopia | Beliefs about prevention, treatment, alternative cures and role of spiritual leaders in health education | In-depth interviews and focus group discussions | Adults (positive and negative HIV status), non-health personnel at health facilities, school staff, health workers, medical providers, community leaders |
| Assefa 2014 | Ethiopia | Understanding interventions at health facilities and community-based organisations that improve retention in care | In-depth interviews and focus group discussions | Clinicians, adherence counsellors, case managers, adherence supporters, community-based service providers |
| Axelsson 2015 | Lesotho | Adherence patterns, barriers to and facilitators of adherence to ART | In-depth interviews | HIV positive adults |
| Barfod 2013 | ||||
| Beckmann 2013 | Tanzania | Understanding how HIV-positive people navigate life and the complex treatment regimens | Ethnographic observations, in-depth interviews | HIV positive adults |
| Bezabhe 2014 | Ethiopia | Barriers and facilitators to adherence | In-depth interviews and focus group discussions | HIV positive adults and healthcare workers |
| Bhagwanjee 2013 | South Africa | Impact of gender roles and relationships on HIV adherence | In-depth interviews | Seroconcordant couples |
| Bogart 2013 | South Africa | Barriers to linkage of care | In-depth interviews and focus group discussions | HIV positive adults and healthcare workers |
| Braga 2013 | Mozambique | Experience of living with HIV and interacting with health services | Ethnographic observations, in-depth interviews | HIV positive adults, health workers, lay counsellors, policy makers, traditional healers, faith healers |
| Campbell 2015 | Zimbabwe | Patient labelling as good or bad patients and how it affects patient experiences at clinic visits | Ethnographic observations, in-depth interviews and focus group discussions | HIV positive adults, caregivers of children with HIV, health workers |
| Jones 2015 | South Africa | Treatment seeking behaviours of HIV positive adults | Ethnographic observations and in-depth interviews | HIV positive adults, health workers, lay counsellors |
| Katz 2015 | South Africa | Experiences linked to transfer of care from PEPFAR funded clinic to state funded clinics and the impact on retention in care | In-depth interviews | HIV positive adults |
| Layer 2014 | Tanzania | Barriers and facilitators to linkage and retention in care | In-depth interviews and participant observation | HIV positive adults, health workers, traditional healers, spiritual healers and lay counsellors |
| Layer 2014 | Tanzania | Experiences and factors influencing decisions to disengage from HIV care | In-depth interviews | HIV positive adults who had disengaged from care |
| Maeri 2016 | Kenya | Experiences and beliefs about HIV disclosure among couples | In-depth interviews | HIV positive and negative adults, health workers, health managers, lay counsellors, research assistants, community health assistants and peer educators |
| Masquillier 2015 | South Africa | Role and influence of household in supporting adherence and retention in care | In-depth interviews and focus group discussions | HIV positive adults and community health workers |
| Naik 2013 | South Africa | Factors that influence linkage to HIV care | In-depth interviews | HIV positive adults |
| Niehaus 2014 | South Africa | Factors other than treatment literacy, that influence linkage and adherence | Ethnography, case study | Life history of a man living with HIV/AIDS |
| Okoror 2013 | Nigeria | Cultural context of HIV stigma on adherence | In-depth interviews and focus group discussions | HIV positive adults |
| Rasmussen 2013 | Uganda | HIV counselling practices | Participant observation and in-depth interviews | HIV positive adults, lay counsellors |
| Russell 2016 | Uganda | Influence of health care providers on HIV self-management | In-depth interviews | HIV positive adults on ART |
| Russell 2016 | Barriers and facilitators to HIV self-management | |||
| Ware 2013 | Nigeria Uganda and Tanzania | Reasons for missed clinic visits and disengagement from HIV care | In-depth interviews | HIV positive adults who had disengaged from care |
| Scott 2014 | Zimbabwe | Role of community networks in facilitating access and adherence to ART | In-depth interviews, focus group discussions and participant observations | HIV positive adults, caregivers of HIV positive children, health workers |
| Inzaule 2016 | Uganda | Barriers and facilitators to long-term adherence | In-depth interviews and focus group discussions | HIV positive adults and adolescents in long-term HIV care (expert clients), health workers, lay counsellors |
| Hornschuh 2014 | South Africa | Experience of HIV care amongst HIV positive adolescents and young adults | Focus group discussions | HIV positive adolescents and young adults |
| Mburu 2014 | Zambia | Adolescents' experiences with disclosure | In-depth interviews and focus group discussions | HIV positive adolescents, caregivers and health workers |
| Mutumba 2015 | Uganda | Challenges and coping strategies of perinatally infected HIV positive adolescents | In-depth interviews | HIV positive adolescents |
| Mutwa 2013 | Rwanda | Barriers and facilitators to adherence in HIV positive adolescents | In-depth interviews, focus group discussions and role play | HIV positive adolescents and their caregivers |
| Wolf 2014 | Kenya | Reasons for disengagement in HIV care among adolescents | In-depth interviews and focus group discussions | HIV positive adolescents who had disengaged from care, community health workers and educators |
| Busza 2014 | Zimbabwe | Barriers and facilitators of caregivers of children with HIV to retention in care | In-depth interviews | Caregivers of children with HIV, key informants from community-based support services |
| Kawuma 2014 | Uganda | Barriers to adherence during childhood and adolescence | In-depth interviews | HIV positive children and adolescents, caregivers and health workers |
| Mattes 2014 | Tanzania | Children and adolescents' experiences of living with HIV | Participant observation, in-depth interviews, thematic drawing and photo-elicitation interviews | HIV positive children and adolescents, caregivers |
| Coetzee 2015 | South Africa | Barriers and facilitators to adherence in HIV positive children | In-depth interviews and focus group discussions | Caregivers of children with HIV, health workers, HIV counsellors and traditional healers |
| Sikstrom 2014 | Malawi | Challenges to successful long-term paediatric ART | In-depth interviews, participant observation and in-depth case studies | HIV positive children and their caregivers, key informants (religious leaders, health care workers, grandparents, traditional healers, farmers, landowners and self-employed migrants) |
| Mburu 2014 | Uganda | Influence of stigma and masculinity on engagement in HIV care | In-depth interviews and focus group discussions | HIV positive men and women, household members, health workers, health workers, health managers, lay counsellors, community leaders |
| Sikweyiya 2014 | South Africa | The influence of HIV on the lives of men and their sense of masculinity | In-depth interviews | HIV positive men |
| Siu 2013 | Uganda | Men's construction of masculinity and its influence on HIV treatment seeking behaviour | In-depth interviews and participant observation | HIV positive and negative men |
| Siu 2014 | Influence of HIV on gender relations and men's sense of masculinity | |||
| Zissette 2016 | South Africa | Influence of masculinity on access to and utilisation of HIV care | In-depth interviews and participant observation | HIV positive men |
| Dlamini-Simelane 2016 | Swaziland | Factors influencing access to care amongst married women with HIV | Ethnographic observations and in-depth interviews | Married women with HIV |
| Mbonye 2016 | Uganda | Perceptions related to early linkage (test and treat) | In-depth interviews | HIV positive and negative women |
| Watt 2017 | South Africa | Impact of sexual trauma on HIV care | In-depth interviews | HIV positive women with sexual trauma histories |
| Wouters 2016 | South Africa | Women's experience of living with HIV and accessing care | In-depth interviews | HIV positive women |
| Elwell 2016 | Malawi | Factors influencing retention in Prevention of Mother to Child Transmission (PMTCT) programmes | In-depth interviews, focus group discussions and participant observations | HIV positive pregnant or postpartum women, health workers, community leaders |
| Gourlay 2014 | Tanzania | Influence of patient-provider interactions on PMTCT uptake | Participatory learning and action group activities (includes focus group discussions, role-playing, creating maps), in-depth interviews, participant observation | HIV positive and negative women and men, health workers and health officials |
| Hatcher 2016 | South Africa | Influence of intimate partner violence (IPV) on PMTCT uptake and adherence | In-depth interviews | HIV positive women experiencing IPV |
| Katirayi 2016 | Swaziland | Barriers and facilitators to linkage and adherence of Option B+ | In-depth interviews and focus group discussions | HIV positive pregnant or postpartum women and health workers |
| Kim 2016 | Malawi | Barriers and facilitators to linkage and adherence of Option B+ | In-depth interviews | HIV positive pregnant or postpartum women |
| McMahon 2016 | Tanzania | Factors influencing disengagement from PMTCT care | In-depth interviews | HIV positive pregnant or postpartum women who had disengaged from HIV care |
| Ngarina 2013 | Tanzania | Barriers to adherence post delivery | In-depth interviews | HIV positive women with detectable viral load after 24 months of delivery |
| Fielding-Miller 2014 | Swaziland | Experience and health service needs of sex workers | In-depth interviews | HIV positive sex workers |
| Mtetwa 2013 | Zimbabwe | Barriers to linkage and retention in care among sex-workers | Focus group discussions | HIV positive sex workers |
| Nakanwagi 2016 | Uganda | Facilitators and barriers to linkage to HIV care among female sex workers | In-depth interviews | HIV positive sex workers, peer educators, NGO outreach workers |
| Guise 2016 | Kenya | Barriers and facilitators to HIV care amongst People who inject drugs (PWID) | Ethnographic observations and in-depth interviews | HIV positive people who inject drugs |
| Saleem 2016 | Tanzania | Barriers and facilitators to linkage to care among people who inject drugs | In-depth interviews | HIV positive people who inject drugs attending a methadone clinic, health care providers |
| Parsons 2015 | Zambia | Experiences of HIV positive adults with disabilities and how this influences access to HIV care | In-depth interviews | HIV positive adults with disabilities |
| Yoshida 2014 | Zambia | Experience of HIV positive people with disabilities | In-depth interviews | HIV positive adults with disabilities |
| Cange 2015 | Cameroon | Influence of stigma on men who have sex with men (MSM) mental health and access to HIV care | In-depth interviews and focus group discussions | MSM (regardless of HIV status) |
| Kennedy 2013 | Swaziland | Experiences and health needs of HIV positive MSM | In-depth interviews and focus group discussions | HIV positive MSM, HIV programme planners, policy makers, health workers, community leaders |
| Mendelsohn 2014 | Kenya and Malaysia | Factors influencing adherence and retention in care amongst refugees | In-depth interviews | HIV positive refugees |
The nine emergent themes.
Fig 2Theoretical model of influences on engagement and adherence to ART.