| Literature DB >> 30941210 |
Chipo Mutambo1, Khumbulani Hlongwana1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In order to accelerate the HIV response to meet the UNAIDS 90-90-90 indicators for children, healthcare workers need to lead a scale-up of HIV services in primary healthcare settings. Such a scale-up will require investigation into existing barriers that prevent healthcare workers from effectively providing those services to children. Furthermore, if the identified barriers are not well understood, designing context-specific and effective public health response programmes may prove difficult.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30941210 PMCID: PMC6421001 DOI: 10.1155/2019/8056382
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1240
A summary of the studies identified.
| Reference | Title | HIV focus | Study objective | Location | Population sample size | Study design and methods of data collection |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| [ | Health care workers' perspectives about disclosure to HIV-infected children; cross-sectional survey of health facilities in Gauteng and Mpumalanga provinces, | Disclosure | To assess how disclosure to HIV-infected children is being implemented in public health facilities | South | 206, 140 (68.2%) were nurses, 44 (21.5%) were lay counsellors, and 4 (2%) were doctors | A cross-sectional survey using a semistructured questionnaire |
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| [ | Healthcare providers' perspectives on discussing HIV status with infected children | Disclosure | To investigate South African healthcare providers' perspectives on discussing HIV status with infected children | South | 40 providers, 11 doctors, 13 nurses, and 7 others (social workers and pharmacists) | Qualitative using structured |
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| [ | “If I Take My Medicine, I Will Be Strong:” Evaluation of a Paediatric HIV | Disclosure | To evaluate healthcare worker and caregiver perspectives on the effectiveness of the intervention in increasing their capacity to engage in the disclosure process and improving paediatric patient adherence behaviour | Namibia | 35 healthcare workers and 46 caregivers of HIV-positive children | Qualitative interviews using semistructured questionnaires |
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| [ | Using a Health Provider | Disclosure | To determine processes, concerns, successes, beliefs, and experiences of providers surrounding paediatric HIV disclosure | Kenya | 21 providers, 3–5 from each clinic; 2 clinicians, 5 clinical officers, 3 nurses, 3 nurse counsellors, 2 psychologists, 1 clinic assistant, and 1 peer educator | Qualitative interviews using semistructured questionnaires |
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| [ | HIV Status Disclosure to | Disclosure | To examine healthcare worker and adolescent perceptions of the disclosure process in health facilities | Zimbabwe | 31 (14 male, 17 female) prenatally infected adolescents aged 16–20, 15 (1 male, 14 female) healthcare workers | Qualitative interviews using semistructured questionnaires |
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| [ | Barriers to Provider Initiated Testing and Counselling for Children in a High HIV Prevalence Setting: A Mixed Methods Study | PICT | To investigate the provision and uptake of HIV provider-initiated counselling and testing (PICT) among children in primary healthcare settings and to explore healthcare worker perspectives on the provision of HIV testing to children | Zimbabwe | Children aged 6 to | Qualitative interviews using semistructured questionnaires |
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| [ | ‘Are we allowed to disclose?': A Healthcare Team's Experiences of Talking with Children and Adolescents about their HIV status | Disclosure | To explore the perspectives and experiences of a healthcare team at a paediatric clinic in South Africa about disclosure to children | South | 23 healthcare providers | Qualitative study-focus group discussions |
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| [ | Factors influencing uptake of HIV care and treatment among children in South Africa-a qualitative study of caregivers and clinic staff | HIV care and treatment | To explore the perspectives of clinic staff and caregivers of children enrolled in HIV services on barriers and facilitators of children's uptake of HIV care | South | 21 caregivers of HIV-infected children attending these clinics, 21 clinic staff members, and three lead members of staff from affiliated care centres | Qualitative study-interviews using semistructured questionnaires |
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| [ | “Experiences with the disclosure of HIV-positive status to the infected child”: Perspectives of healthcare providers in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania | Disclosure | To explore experiences of healthcare providers in the disclosure of HIV-positive status to the infected child and factors influencing the process | Tanzania | 20 healthcare providers | Qualitative interviews using semistructured questionnaires |
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| [ | Routine checks for HIV in children attending primary health care facilities in South Africa: Attitudes of nurses and child caregivers | HIV | To describe the attitudes towards, and experiences of, implementation of routine checks for HIV in the context of IMCI implementation, from the perspective of both caregivers and nurses | South | 5 with Integrated Management of Childhood Illness- (IMCI-) trained nurses (3 in KwaZulu-Natal and 2 in Limpopo) and 5 with mothers and caregivers (3 in KwaZulu-Natal and 2 in Limpopo), 10 nurses in each district for each focus group | Qualitative study-focus group discussions |
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| [ | Barriers and facilitators to antiretroviral medication adherence among HIV infected paediatric patients in Ethiopia: A qualitative study | Antiretroviral therapy adherence | To explore the barriers and facilitators to Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy (HAART) adherence among HIV-infected children | Ethiopia | 12 caregivers of nonadherent children, 14 key informants, eight counsellors, and four physicians, including two paediatricians | Qualitative interviews using semistructured questionnaires |
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram.
A summary of the barriers to providing HIV testing, adherence, and disclosure services to children in Sub-Saharan Africa.
| Themes | Key barriers | Studies identified |
|---|---|---|
| Healthcare worker-related barriers | (i) Healthcare workers lack formal training on child-friendly approaches to enable them to provide adequate HIV services to children | [ |
| (ii) Healthcare workers have inadequate knowledge and understanding around HIV and the law | [ | |
| (iii) Inadequate knowledge of providing children with HIV services | [ | |
| (iv) Lack of child-friendly job aides to improve their communication with both children and their primary caregivers | [ | |
| (v) Inadequate buy-in by healthcare workers into provider-initiated counselling and testing (PICT) for children | [ | |
| (vi) Confusion on child and primary caregiver consent for HIV testing, counselling, and disclosure | [ | |
| (vii) Healthcare workers lack the confidence to provide HIV services to children as they are not trained | [ | |
| (viii) Healthcare workers have concerns about the safety of providing provider-initiated counselling and testing (PICT) to children who are sometimes unaccompanied as it has legal implications | [ | |
| (ix) Healthcare workers complained of facing time constraints when providing primary caregivers and their children with disclosure support | [ | |
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| Primary caregiver-related barriers | (i) Healthcare workers reported that stigma is still rife which prevents primary caregivers from disclosing to their children | [ |
| (ii) Children do not pick up their own medication; instead, primary caregivers pick it up which makes it difficult for healthcare workers to effectively clinically monitor them | [ | |
| (iii) Primary caregivers lack an understanding of the benefits of disclosure which makes them unwilling to agree to disclose to their children | [ | |
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| System-related barriers | (i) No training courses for healthcare workers are available concerning the provision of child-focused HIV care | [ |
| (ii) No recommendations and guidelines are available to guide healthcare workers concerning the provision of child-focused HIV services to children | [ | |
| (iii) Staff shortages in facilities prevent healthcare workers from providing HIV services to children | [ | |
| (iv) The Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) programme does not provide adequate HIV information for healthcare workers to use when providing HIV support and care to children | [ | |
| (v) The Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) programme clinical stationery is a limitation to full service delivery as a recording of HIV suspects may expose healthcare workers to legal liability | [ | |
| (vi) Healthcare workers cited the lack of child-friendly and palatable antiretroviral formulations as barriers to adherence | [ | |
| (vii) Healthcare workers also cited HIV testing kits and kit stock-outs as barriers to testing children in primary healthcare settings | [ | |
| (viii) Healthcare workers also cited the lack of child-friendly areas in health facilities as barriers to improving children's healthcare experiences | [ | |