| Literature DB >> 32059023 |
Nathan Ford1,2, Elvin Geng3, Tom Ellman4, Catherine Orrell5, Peter Ehrenkranz6, Izukanji Sikazwe7, Andreas Jahn8, Miriam Rabkin9, Stephen Ayisi Addo10, Anna Grimsrud11, Sydney Rosen12, Isaac Zulu13, William Reidy9, Thabo Lejone14, Tsitsi Apollo15, Charles Holmes7,16, Ana Francisca Kolling17, Rosina Phate Lesihla18, Huu Hai Nguyen19, Baker Bakashaba20, Lastone Chitembo21, Ghion Tiriste22, Meg Doherty1, Helen Bygrave4.
Abstract
Nathan Ford and co-authors discuss global priorities in the provision of HIV prevention and treatment services.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32059023 PMCID: PMC7021280 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1003028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Evolution of HIV service delivery guidance.
| Issue | Current guidance | Additional guidance needed |
|---|---|---|
| Peer support and navigation, service integration, and tracing. | Phased strategies of testing distribution and linkage through peers. | |
| Linkage to prevention. | ||
| Within 7 days with the offer of same-day ART. | Cointerventions that maximize treatment outcomes following rapid ART initiation, contextual factors that could influence success of such cointerventions. | |
| Minimum counseling intervention required prior to and after same-day ART. | ||
| Guidance on timing of ART initiation for settings with differing resources and access to baseline diagnostics related to advanced disease screening. | ||
| None. | Out-of-facility ART initiation and cointerventions, duration of community follow-up. | |
| Peer counseling, mobile text messaging, reminder devices, CBT, behavior skills training, fixed-dose combinations. | Optimal approach to measuring adherence, especially as patients in less intense models of care have less interaction with the healthcare system. Timing and frequency of interventions, healthcare worker attitude, patient experience. | |
| Peer support, adherence clubs, and extra care for high-risk people. | Role of peers (adolescents and key populations). | |
| None. | Interventions to support tracing (including frequency and methods) and timely reengagement to care, including nonjudgmental approaches. | |
| Nurse initiation of ART. | Nurse initiation of ART including for children and regimen change. | |
| Lay-worker provision of certain essential diagnostic tests. | Defined list of diagnostic tests that can be provided by lay workers with emphasis on the importance of using the result to change patient management. | |
| 3–6 monthly clinic visits and drug refills. | Optimal frequency of clinical visits and refills for adults, children, and adolescents. | |
| Reduced clinic visits for stable clients, package of care for advanced HIV disease. | Narrowing the choice of different models for stable clients (stable adults, children and adolescents, pregnant and breastfeeding women, key populations). | |
| HIV and TB treatment, ART provision where opioid substitution therapy is provided, integration of sexually transmitted infections and family planning services within HIV care settings, assessment and management of cardiovascular risk and depression. | HIV and noncommunicable diseases and sexual and reproductive health. | |
| None. | Good practices to promote approachable and welcoming services. |
ART, antiretroviral therapy; CBT, cognitive behavioral therapy; TB, tuberculosis.
Fig 1Country policies on the frequency of clinic visits and drug refills for people who are stable on ART.
Data from UNAIDS, 2019: http://lawsandpolicies.unaids.org/ ART, antiretroviral therapy.