| Literature DB >> 34148206 |
Alison Swartz1, Brendan Maughan-Brown2, Shehani Perera3, Abigail Harrison4, Caroline Kuo4, Mark N Lurie4, Philip Smith5, Linda-Gail Bekker5, Omar Galárraga4.
Abstract
Incentive-based interventions are used to encourage HIV testing, linkage to HIV care, and antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence. Studies assessing efficacy of cash incentives have raised questions about the perceived ethicality of and attitudes towards incentives. Here we explore patients' and health providers' perspectives of the acceptability of a conditional cash transfer for ART initiation after receiving a positive HIV test through community-based services in resource-poor communities in Cape Town, South Africa. Drawing on in-depth interviews with patients and health care workers (HCWs), we find that, despite the perception that cash incentives are effective in promoting ART initiation, significant ambivalence surrounds the acceptability of such incentives. The receipt of a financial incentive was highly moralized, and fraught with challenges. Increasing the acceptability of cash incentives through careful design and delivery of interventions is central to the potential of this type of intervention for improving outcomes along the HIV care continuum.Entities:
Keywords: Antiretroviral therapy; Conditional cash transfers; Conditional economic incentives; Contingency management; HIV care continuum; HIV/AIDS; Linkage to care; South Africa
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34148206 PMCID: PMC8685299 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-021-03355-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165