| Literature DB >> 32967868 |
Lawrence Mbuagbaw1,2,3, Anisa Hajizadeh4, Annie Wang4, Dominik Mertz4,5, Daeria O Lawson4,6, Marek Smieja4,5, Anita C Benoit7,8, Elizabeth Alvarez4,9, Lisa Puchalski Ritchie10,11,12, Beth Rachlis13, Carmen Logie7,14, Winston Husbands15, Shari Margolese16, Babalwa Zani17, Lehana Thabane4,2,18,19,20.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: We sought to map the evidence and identify interventions that increase initiation of antiretroviral therapy, adherence to antiretroviral therapy and retention in care for people living with HIV at high risk for poor engagement in care.Entities:
Keywords: HIV & AIDS; health policy; therapeutics
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32967868 PMCID: PMC7513605 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-034793
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Outline of the HIV care cascade.
Categorisation of intervention types in the systematic reviews
| Intervention category | Types |
| Behavioural and educational | Medication-assisted therapy, mindfulness-based stress reduction, motivational interviewing, psychotherapy, relaxation |
| Digital | Digital technology-based interventions such as alarms, electronic pillboxes and pagers, mobile device text messages and voice messages, computer-based or internet-based interventions, online support communities and electronic medication packaging |
| Mixed | Combinations of any of the listed categories |
| Economic | Food assistance, cash incentives, performance-based financing, household economic strengthening |
| Health system | Point-of-care services, decentralised services, less frequent visits |
| Medication modification | Single tablet regimens, fixed dose combinations, rapid medication initiation, observed therapy |
| Peer or community based | Homebased care, community-based services including the use of community health workers, lay health workers, treatment buddies, field officers, peer educators, volunteers and counsellors |
| Pharmacy based | Changes to standard pharmacy service delivery, pharmacist delivered interventions |
| Task-shifting | Service delivery by non-doctor staff, nurse-led interventions |
Figure 2Systematic review flow diagram. PLHIV, people living with HIV; RCTs, randomised controlled trials.
Summary characteristics of included systematic reviews: n=98
| Variable | Statistic |
| Year: median (quartile 1; quartile 3) | 2015 (2013; 2017) |
| Number of included primary studies: median (quartile 1; quartile 3) | 29 (11; 28) |
| Number of randomised trials: median (quartile 1; quartile 3) | 8 (4; 13) |
| Vulnerable populations included: n (%) | |
| African, Caribbean or Black | 66 (67.3) |
| Men who have sex with men | 32 (32.7) |
| People who inject drugs | 25 (25.5) |
| Sex workers | 6 (6.1) |
| Immigrants | 4 (4.1) |
| Incarcerated persons | 4 (4.1) |
| Intervention categories: n (%) | |
| Mixed | 37 (37.8) |
| Digital | 22 (22.4) |
| Behavioural or educational | 9 (9.2) |
| Peer or community based | 8 (8.2) |
| Health system | 7 (7.1) |
| Medication modification | 6 (6.1) |
| Economic | 4 (4.1) |
| Pharmacy | 3 (3.1) |
| Task-shifting | 2 (2.0) |
| Care cascade outcomes: n (%) * | |
| Adherence | 82 (59.0) |
| Retention | 39 (28.1) |
| Initiation | 18 (12.9) |
*Not mutually exclusive.
Figure 3Risk of bias summary.
Figure 4Evidence maps of HIV care cascade interventions.