| Literature DB >> 34903209 |
Cosette Audi1, Ola Jahanpour2, Gretchen Antelman3, Laura Guay3, Mastidia Rutaihwa4, Roland van de Ven2, Godfrey Woelk3, Sarah J Baird5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Adolescents living with HIV face substandard outcomes along the continuum of care, including higher rates of poor adherence and virologic failure. Support groups have been identified as a method to improve adherence, but there is insufficient evidence regarding their effectiveness. This study seeks to examine the protective influences for and barriers to antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence in HIV-positive adolescents living in Tanzania.Entities:
Keywords: Adherence; Adolescent; HIV; Qualitative methods; Social support
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34903209 PMCID: PMC8670050 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-021-12323-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Facilitators for and barriers to ART adherence among HIV-positive adolescents
| Domain | Facilitators | Barriers |
|---|---|---|
| Adolescent support groups | • Support groups helped adolescents feel more confident and more comfortable taking their medication in front of others. The groups eased feelings of stigma and isolation. • Support groups taught adolescents about HIV and the effects of skipping medication. | • Support groups were not accessible to all adolescents. |
| Treatment supporters | • Treatment supporters reminded adolescents to take their ARTs. • Supporters provided both logistic and emotional support to adolescents. • Adolescents agreed that health providers respected them, and could not recount any mistreatment from providers | • Not all adolescents had access to support networks. |
| Logistic and Physical | • Adolescents developed routines to ensure proper adherence. • Feeling healthy motivated adolescents to continue taking their medication. | • Changes to daily schedules, such as traveling or running late for school, impacted adherence. • Cost-related barriers, including inability to afford food or transport to the clinic, negatively impacted adherence. • Some adolescents were deterred by ART’s physical side effects. • Fear of disclosing their status often led adolescents to delay taking their medication. • Adolescents developed strategies to hide their medication. |
| Knowledge and psychosocial | • Adolescents believed that understanding the reasons for medication made adherence easier. | • Late disclosure of HIV status to the adolescent; and fear of disclosing to others • Lack of education about HIV • Anger/despair about HIV status |