| Literature DB >> 34170913 |
Lauren M Hill1, Friday Saidi2, Kellie Freeborn3, K Rivet Amico4, Nora E Rosenberg1, Suzanne Maman1, Twambilile Phanga2, Mercy Tsidya2, Sara Chirwa2, Chifundo Zimba2, Wilbroad Mutale5, Benjamin H Chi3.
Abstract
To eliminate mother-to-child transmission of HIV (EMTCT), scalable strategies to enhance antiretroviral adherence for both antiretroviral therapy (ART) and pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) are needed as part of integrated HIV and maternal-child health services. We developed Tonse Pamodzi ("all of us together"), an adaptable intervention integrating biomedical and behavioral components to support HIV treatment and prevention. We describe our intervention development process, which comprised formative qualitative research, a review of the literature, and technical input from stakeholders representing the community, health systems, and policymakers. The resulting intervention, described herein, integrates patient-centered counseling and engagement of a patient-selected adherence supporter for pregnant and breastfeeding women initiating ART or PrEP. Patients receiving the intervention engage in Integrated Next Step Counseling (iNSC) sessions delivered by trained counselors to build and maintain adherence skills. Each patient also has the option of selecting an adherence supporter (partner, family member, or friend) who may participate in iNSC sessions and provide adherence support outside of these sessions. This flexible intervention is adaptable not only to ART or PrEP use, but also to the needs and preferences of each woman and the clinical context. If shown to be acceptable and feasible, the Tonse Pamodzi intervention may be an important tool in continuing efforts for EMTCT.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34170913 PMCID: PMC8232532 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0253280
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Potential barriers to antiretroviral therapy and/or HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis adherence, as identified in a technical consultation meeting (September 2018), mapped to recommended intervention components.
| Patient-centered counseling | External adherence supporter | |
|---|---|---|
| Lack of knowledge about ART or PrEP | • | • |
| Low perceived risk, feeling healthy | • | • |
| Fear of stigma | • | • |
| Conflicting demands and responsibilities | • | • |
| Traditional and spiritual beliefs | • | |
| Substance use | • | • |
| Mental health | • | • |
| Power dynamics–social, cultural | • | • |
| Partner violence | • | • |
| Fear of disclosure (HIV status, PrEP use) | • | • |
| Poor social support | • | • |
| Poor treatment by healthcare providers | • | |
| Transportation | • | • |
| Discreet storage of medications | • | • |
| Food requirements for medication | • | |
| Clinic wait times | • | • |
| Quality of counseling | • |
Prior adherence support interventions informing social support intervention component.
| Intervention | Context | Intervention description | Adherence effect summary |
|---|---|---|---|
| COMDIS Treatment Supporter program [ | Uganda | Close confidant selected by the participant and trained by staff to provide social support and directed adherence support. | Intervention participants had >4x the odds of achieving optimal adherence (OR = 4.51, p = 0.027]. |
| Treatment Partner-Assisted Therapy [ | Uganda | Treatment partners selected by patients trained to conduct directly observed therapy and support side effect management & prescription pickup. | Undetectable viral load at 24 weeks was achieved by 61.7% of intervention arm vs. 50.2% of control (OR = 1.58, p<0.05]. |
| HEART program [ | United States | Nurse-delivered counseling and education for both the patient and a support partner selected by the participant. | 40% of intervention group adherent vs. 28% of control (p = .02) |
Fig 1Tonse Pamodzi intervention overview: Enhanced ART & PrEP adherence support.
Overview of Integrated Next Step Counseling (iNSC) steps.
| Step | Content |
|---|---|
| Introduce | Explain what you want to discuss, why, and ask permission |
| Frame discussion | Frame discussion as involving two topics (typically, first about general well-being and then about adherence). |
| Review | Check in on previous goals/discussions, close and move into current experiences (follow-up visits only) |
| Explore | Explore the socio-ecological factors that optimize and that challenge the topic area being discussed (e.g., well-being, sexual health, PrEP/ART start decisions, PrEP/ART uptake, PrEP/ART adherence, or PrEP/ART adherence) |
| Tailor | Use the context and experiences shared to focus in on a specific aspect of the topic area (e.g., well-being, sexual health, PrEP/ART start decisions, PrEP/ART uptake, PrEP/ART adherence, or PrEP/ART adherence) the is relevant, meaningful and important to the participant to direct the focus of the next question and remaining discussion |
| Identify | Ask what would need |
| Strategize | Ask how the participant could see the need (identified above) being met |
| Agree | From list of ways the need could be met, ask the participant if she would be willing to try out one or more of those strategies before she returns to clinic again. Explore action plan and help participant to develop method of evaluating whether or not the strategy helped with the need and related next steps |
| Transition/ Close | Move to a new topic and repeat the flow OR close the discussion |
| For participants with an adherence supporter, they are first asked permission to invite their adherence supporter into the discussion, discuss exactly what aspects of their needs, strategies, and goals they are comfortable sharing in the joint discussion, and then the joint session includes an appropriate summary and exploration of the supporter’s thoughts and insights around the shared material. Tangible and emotional social support from the supporter, when offered, become part of the action plan. |
*Omukhulupilira may be included in an abbreviated dyadic session (covering final 3 steps) following the main individual session if the participant desires
1 The participant’s need (eg., need for intimacy, support, connection, access, motivation) is distinct from actions or behaviors one would execute to meet a need. For example, one may go for HIV testing (strategy) to feel connected to and supported by partner (need). Thus, when participants respond to what they need with a strategy, counselors probe to understand what that strategy is doing for the person- what need is it helping to address.