| Literature DB >> 32885202 |
Martin Muddu1,2,3, Andrew K Tusubira2, Brenda Nakirya2, Rita Nalwoga2, Fred C Semitala1,3, Ann R Akiteng2, Jeremy I Schwartz2,4, Isaac Ssinabulya1,2,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Persons living with HIV (PLHIV) receiving antiretroviral therapy have increased risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD). Integration of services for hypertension (HTN), the primary CVD risk factor, into HIV clinics is recommended in Uganda. Our prior work demonstrated multiple gaps in implementation of integrated HTN care along the HIV treatment cascade. In this study, we sought to explore barriers to and facilitators of integrating HTN screening and treatment into HIV clinics in Eastern Uganda.Entities:
Keywords: Barriers; CFIR; Facilitators; Hypertension and HIV integration; Uganda
Year: 2020 PMID: 32885202 PMCID: PMC7427847 DOI: 10.1186/s43058-020-00033-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci Commun ISSN: 2662-2211
Fig. 1CFIR domains and constructs which emerged in the study (Damschroder et al. [19])
Ratings assigned to CFIR construct by study site
| High performing site (C) | Intermediate performing site (B) | Low performing site (A) | Distinguishing constructs | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Relative advantage | + 2 | + 2 | + 2 | Not |
| Adaptability | + 2 | + 2 | + 2 | Not |
| Complexity | + 1 | + 1 | + 1 | Not |
| Patient needs and resources | − 1 | − 2 | − 2 | Weakly |
| Peer pressure | − 2 | − 2 | − 2 | Not |
| External policy and incentives | − 1 | − 1 | − 2 | Weakly |
| Compatibility | + 2 | + 2 | + 2 | Not |
| Relative Priority | − 1 | − 2 | − 2 | Weakly |
| Organizational incentives and rewards | + 1 | − 2 | − 2 | Strongly |
| Available resources | + 2 | Strongly | ||
| Access to knowledge and information | + 2 | Strongly | ||
| Knowledge and beliefs about the intervention | 1 | 1 | Strongly | |
| Self-efficacy | + 1 | Strongly | ||
| Planning | + 1 | Strongly | ||
| Executing | Weakly | |||
| Reflecting and evaluating | Not | |||
| Engaging: opinion leaders | Not | |||
Fig. 2Differences in cascade outcomes across the three HIV clinics included in the study. The denominator for each cascade step is the achievement at the previous steps
Criteria used to assign ratings to the CFIR constructs that influence screening and treatment of HTN in the HIV clinics
| Rating | Criteria |
|---|---|
| − 2 | The construct has a negative influence to HTN screening and treatment in the HIV clinic. An impeding influence in work processes and/or an impeding influence in implementation efforts. The majority of interviewees (at least two) described with explicit examples how the key or all aspects of a construct manifests itself in a negative way. |
| − 1 | The construct has a negative influence to HTN screening and treatment in the HIV clinic, an impeding influence in work processes and/or an impeding influence in implementation efforts. Interviewees make general statements about the construct manifesting in a negative way but without concrete examples: • The construct is mentioned only in passing or at a high level without examples or evidence of actual, concrete descriptions of how that construct manifests • There is a mixed effect of different aspects of the construct but with a general overall negative effect • There is sufficient information to make an indirect inference about the generally negative influence and/or • Judged as weakly negative by the absence of the construct |
| 0 | A construct has neutral influence to HTN screening and treatment in the HIV clinic if: • It appears to have neutral effect (purely descriptive) or is only mentioned generically without valence • There is no evidence of positive or negative influence • Credible or reliable interviewees contradict each other • There are positive and negative influences at different levels in the organization that balance each other out, and/or different aspects of the construct that have positive influence while others have negative influence and overall, and the effect is neutral |
| + 1 | The construct is a positive influence to HTN screening and treatment in the HIV clinic, a facilitating influence in work processes, and/or a facilitating influence in implementation efforts. Interviewees make general statements about the construct manifesting in a positive way but without concrete • The construct is mentioned only in passing or at a high level without examples or evidence of actual, concrete descriptions of how that construct manifests; • There is a mixed effect of different aspects of the construct but with a general overall positive effect; and/or • There is sufficient information to make an indirect inference about the generally positive influence. |
| + 2 | The construct is a positive influence for HTN screening and treatment in the HIV clinic, a facilitating influence in work processes, and/or a facilitating influence in implementation efforts. The majority of interviewees (at least two) describe explicit examples of how the key or all aspects of a construct manifests itself in a positive way. Missing Interviewee(s) were not asked about the presence or influence of the construct; or if asked about a construct, their responses did not correspond to the intended construct and were instead coded to another construct. Interviewee(s) lack of knowledge about a construct does not necessarily indicate missing data and may instead indicate the absence of the construct. |
Number and characteristics of participants involved in this study, by interview type and HIV clinic
| Data collection methods | Mulanda health center IV | Nagongera health center IV | TASO Tororo | District Health Team (DHT) | Total participants | Mean age (SD) | Sex: male only freq (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Focus group discussion (FGDs) for patients | 20 | 20 | 20 | 0 | 60 | 46.4 (± 7.2) | 30 (50.0%) |
| In-depth Interviews (IDIs) for patient | 4 | 4 | 4 | 0 | 12 | 47.2 (± 7.7) | 06 (50.0%) |
| Key informant interviews (KIIs) for healthcare providers | Health facility manger ( | Health facility manger ( | Health facility manger ( | DHO ( | 11 | 34.2 (± 7.6) | 07 (63.6%) |
| Lead nurse ( | Lead nurse ( | Lead nurse ( | 0 | ||||
| Lead clinician ( | Lead clinician ( | Lead clinician ( | 0 | ||||
Key: SD standard deviation, Freq frequency
Significant CFIR constructs and their related barriers or facilitators for integrated HTN/HIV care
| CFIR Domain | CFIR Construct | Barrier or facilitator | Explanation of facilitators and barriers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Relative advantage | Facilitator | Integrated HTN/HIV care saves time and costs on patient transport and improves patient retention. Patients receive both HTN and HIV care in the same clinic on the same appointment date. | |
| Adaptability | Facilitator | HTN/HIV integration fits within routine care in HIV clinics. HTN services can be tailored and refined to meet health needs of PLHIV. | |
| Complexity | Facilitator | Healthcare providers perceived provision of HTN care services in HIV clinics as straight forward and not complex. | |
| Compatibility | Facilitator | HTN/HIV integration was compatible and would fit within the existing workflows at the HIV clinics. | |
| Organizational incentives and rewards | Barrier | Lack of functional BP machines and medicines for HTN treatment in HIV clinics hinder HTN/HIV integration. | |
| Available Resources | Barrier | Lack of functional BP machines, inadequate medicines to treat HTN, and extra work load to limited healthcare providers arising from offering HTN services hinder HTN service provision in HIV clinics. | |
| Access to knowledge and information | Barrier | Many PLHIV are not aware of HTN services at HIV clinics, hence low demand. Lack of training and continuing medical education for healthcare providers on HTN care hinders HTN/HIV integration. | |
| Knowledge and beliefs about the intervention | Barrier | Some healthcare providers lacked knowledge and skills to screen and treat HTN in the HIV clinics. | |
| Self-efficacy | Barrier | Some healthcare providers lacked confidence in their own ability to screen and prescribe medicines for HTN in HIV clinics. | |
| Planning | Barrier | Inadequacies in preparation and planning for integrated HTN/HIV care: healthcare provider and patient orientation to integrated HTN/HIV care were generally suboptimal. | |