HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) Clinical Trial
Official title:
Retention and Engagement in Care of Patients Prior to ART Initiation in the Kagera Region of Tanzania
Retention of patients in HIV care following diagnosis and enrollment is critical to the long-term success of HIV care and treatment scale-up. The goal of this study is to better understand the factors that influence retention and engagement in HIV care among adult patients who are enrolled in HIV care and are not yet eligible for antiretroviral therapy (ART). The study will be conducted at four HIV care and treatment clinics (CTCs) in Kagera Region, Tanzania. This is a mixed-methods study with both qualitative (interviews) and quantitative (surveys) data collection. Our findings will be important towards designing programs that help patients remain in HIV care.
Retention of patients in HIV care following diagnosis and enrollment is a chronic challenge
in both resource rich and resource poor settings (Rosen, Fox et al. 2007; WHO 2009; Fox and
Rosen 2010), and is critical to the long-term success of HIV care and treatment scale-up.
Most research on retention in care has focused on persons who are eligible for or have
initiated antiretroviral therapy (ART), generally examined only demographic and clinical
determinants. However, a large proportion of patients enrolled in HIV care (e.g., 45%,
according to our data from 722 sub-Saharan African clinics) have not been determined to be
ART-eligible and have not yet initiated ART; among these individuals, even less is known
about the magnitude and determinants of non-retention in care. Retention in HIV care prior
to ART initiation is a pre-requisite to: 1) optimal prophylaxis, diagnosis, and treatment of
opportunistic illnesses (OIs); 2) effective secondary prevention of HIV transmission, such
as by patient counseling and education, earlier diagnosis of infected family members and
sexual partners, and prevention of mother to child transmission (PMTCT); and 3) more timely
ART initiation. Retention in care among patients at earlier disease stages is also
increasingly important given the WHO-recommended expansion of ART eligibility guidelines in
resource-limited settings (WHO 2009).
Objective: The goal of this study is to better understand barriers and enablers to retention
and engagement in HIV care among adult patients who are enrolled in HIV care and are not yet
eligible for ART. The specific objectives are:
1. To describe themes in barriers and enablers to retention and engagement in HIV care;
2. To conduct structured interviews to gather relevant baseline information on potential
determinants of non-retention and non-engagement in HIV care;
3. To estimate the incidence of short-term outcomes (missed visits and lost to follow-up
(LTF)), including the rate and proportion of those LTF who are no longer engaged in HIV
care; and
4. To identify determinants of missed visits, LTF, and non-engagement in care among
ART-ineligible patients.
Methods: This study will be conducted using qualitative and quantitative methods at four HIV
care and treatment clinics (CTCs) in Kagera Region, Tanzania.
1. Qualitative: in-depth interviews at two CTCs with up to 20 adult patients (ART naïve,
and ineligible or indeterminate for ART) and about 4 health care workers; and focus
group discussions (about 4 groups of about 6-10 persons/group) with adult patients (ART
naïve, and ineligible or indeterminate for ART).
2. Quantitative: 1) structured baseline interviews at four CTCs (n= approximately 900
adult patients who are ART naïve, and ineligible or indeterminate for ART); 2)
prospective monitoring of these 900 patients using routine CTC patient data to assess
missed visits and LTF; and 4) brief structured surveys of patients who become LTF and
are reached through defaulter tracing efforts.
;
Observational Model: Ecologic or Community, Time Perspective: Prospective
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