20 results on '"Vanqa, Nosivuyile"'
Search Results
2. “This is an illness. No one is supposed to be treated badly”: community-based stigma assessments in South Africa to inform tuberculosis stigma intervention design
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Foster, Isabel, Biewer, Amanda, Vanqa, Nosivuyile, Makanda, Goodman, Tisile, Phumeza, Hayward, Sally E., Wademan, Dillon T., Anthony, Michaile G., Mbuyamba, Rachel, Galloway, Michelle, Human, Wieda, van der Westhuizen, Helene-Mari, Friedland, Jon S., Medina-Marino, Andrew, Schoeman, Ingrid, Hoddinott, Graeme, and Nathavitharana, Ruvandhi R.
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- 2024
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3. Cost and cost-effectiveness of a universal HIV testing and treatment intervention in Zambia and South Africa: evidence and projections from the HPTN 071 (PopART) trial
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Thomas, Ranjeeta, Probert, William J M, Sauter, Rafael, Mwenge, Lawrence, Singh, Surya, Kanema, Sarah, Vanqa, Nosivuyile, Harper, Abigail, Burger, Ronelle, Cori, Anne, Pickles, Michael, Bell-Mandla, Nomtha, Yang, Blia, Bwalya, Justin, Phiri, Mwelwa, Shanaube, Kwame, Floyd, Sian, Donnell, Deborah, Bock, Peter, Ayles, Helen, Fidler, Sarah, Hayes, Richard J, Fraser, Christophe, and Hauck, Katharina
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- 2021
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4. “As a patient I do not belong to the clinic, I belong to the community.” Co-developing a multi-level, person-centred tuberculosis stigma intervention in Cape Town, South Africa
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Hayward, Sally E., primary, Vanqa, Nosivuyile, additional, Makanda, Goodman, additional, Tisile, Phumeza, additional, Ngwatyu, Luthando, additional, Foster, Isabel, additional, Mcinziba, Abenathi, additional, Biewer, Amanda, additional, Mbuyamba, Rachel, additional, Galloway, Michelle, additional, Bunyula, Siyavuya, additional, Westhuizen, Helene-Mari, additional, Friedland, Jon S., additional, Marino-Medina, Andrew, additional, Viljoen, Lario, additional, Schoeman, Ingrid, additional, Hoddinott, Graeme, additional, and Nathavitharana, Ruvandhi R., additional
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- 2024
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5. “This is an illness. No one is supposed to be treated badly”: Community-based stigma assessments in South Africa to inform TB stigma intervention design
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Foster, Isabel, primary, Biewer, Amanda, additional, Vanqa, Nosivuyile, additional, Makanda, Goodman, additional, Tisile, Phumeza, additional, Hayward, Sally E., additional, Wademan, Dillon T., additional, Anthony, Michaile G., additional, Mbuyamba, Rachel, additional, Galloway, Michelle, additional, Human, Wieda, additional, Westhuizen, Helene-Mari, additional, Friedland, Jon S., additional, Marino-Medina, Andrew, additional, Schoeman, Ingrid, additional, Hoddinott, Graeme, additional, and Nathavitharana, Ruvandhi R., additional
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- 2023
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6. “Being seen” at the clinic: Zambian and South African health worker reflections on the relationship between health facility spatial organisation and items and HIV stigma in 21 health facilities, the HPTN 071 (PopART) study
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Bond, Virginia, Nomsenge, Sinazo, Mwamba, Monde, Ziba, Daniel, Birch, Alice, Mubekapi-Musadaidzwa, Constance, Vanqa, Nosivuyile, Viljoen, Lario, Pliakas, Triantafyllos, Ayles, Helen, Hargreaves, James, Hoddinott, Graeme, Stangl, Anne, and Seeley, Janet
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- 2019
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7. Differences in health-related quality of life between HIV-positive and HIV-negative people in Zambia and South Africa: a cross-sectional baseline survey of the HPTN 071 (PopART) trial
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Hargreaves, James, Watson-Jones, Deborah, Godfrey-Faussett, Peter, Cori, Anne, Pickles, Mike, Mandla, Nomtha, Yang, Blia, James, Anelet, Vermaak, Redwaan, Makola, Nozizwe, Hoddinott, Graeme, Naidoo, Vikesh, Bond, Virginia, Simwinga, Musonda, Mwinga, Alwyn, Kosloff, Barry, Limbada, Mohammed, Bwalya, Justin, Ngulube, Chepela, Fraser, Christophe, Eshleman, Susan, Agyei, Yaw, Cummings, Vanessa, Catalano, Denni, Emel, Lynda, Bunts, Lisa, Noble, Heather, Burns, David, Kouda, Alain, Sista, Niru, Moore, Ayana, White, Rhonda, Headen, Tanette, Miller, Eric, Hinson, Kathy, Vermund, Sten, Barnes, Mark, Horn, Lyn, Mwango, Albert, Baldwin, Megan, Wolf, Shauna, Hughes, Erin, Thomas, Ranjeeta, Burger, Ronelle, Harper, Abigail, Kanema, Sarah, Mwenge, Lawrence, Vanqa, Nosivuyile, Bell-Mandla, Nomtha, Smith, Peter C, Floyd, Sian, Bock, Peter, Ayles, Helen, Beyers, Nulda, Donnell, Deborah, Fidler, Sarah, Hayes, Richard, and Hauck, Katharina
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- 2017
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8. Reducing Initial Loss to Follow-up Among People With Bacteriologically Confirmed Tuberculosis: LINKEDin, a Quasi-experimental Study in South Africa.
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Meehan, Sue-Ann, Hesseling, Anneke C, Boulle, Andrew, Chetty, Jolene, Connell, Lucy, Dlamini-Miti, Nomthandazo J, Dunbar, Rory, Preez, Karen Du, George, Gavin, Hoddinott, Graeme, Jennings, Karen, Marx, Florian M, Mudaly, Vanessa, Naidoo, Pren, Ndlovu, Neo, Ngozo, Jacqueline, Smith, Mariette, Strauss, Michael, Tanna, Gaurang, and Vanqa, Nosivuyile
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HEALTH facilities ,TUBERCULOSIS ,SPINAL tuberculosis ,PRIMARY health care ,MEDICAL care ,DRUG registration - Abstract
Every person diagnosed with tuberculosis (TB) needs to initiate treatment. The World Health Organization estimated that 61% of people who developed TB in 2021 were included in a TB treatment registration system. Initial loss to follow-up (ILTFU) is the loss of persons to care between diagnosis and treatment initiation/registration. LINKEDin, a quasi-experimental study, evaluated the effect of 2 interventions (hospital recording and an alert-and-response patient management intervention) in 6 subdistricts across 3 high–TB burden provinces of South Africa. Using integrated electronic reports, we identified all persons diagnosed with TB (Xpert MTB/RIF positive) in the hospital and at primary health care facilities. We prospectively determined linkage to care at 30 days after TB diagnosis. We calculated the risk of ILTFU during the baseline and intervention periods and the relative risk reduction in ILTFU between these periods. We found a relative reduction in ILTFU of 42.4% (95% CI, 28.5%–53.7%) in KwaZulu Natal (KZN) and 22.3% (95% CI, 13.3%–30.4%) in the Western Cape (WC), with no significant change in Gauteng. In KZN and the WC, the relative reduction in ILTFU appeared greater in subdistricts where the alert-and-response patient management intervention was implemented (KZN: 49.3%; 95% CI, 32.4%–62%; vs 32.2%; 95% CI, 5.4%–51.4%; and WC: 34.2%; 95% CI, 20.9%–45.3%; vs 13.4%; 95% CI, 0.7%–24.4%). We reported a notable reduction in ILTFU in 2 provinces using existing routine health service data and applying a simple intervention to trace and recall those not linked to care. TB programs need to consider ILTFU a priority and develop interventions specific to their context to ensure improved linkage to care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Analysing interventions designed to reduce tuberculosis-related stigma: A scoping review
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Foster, Isabel, primary, Galloway, Michelle, additional, Human, Wieda, additional, Anthony, Michaile, additional, Myburgh, Hanlie, additional, Vanqa, Nosivuyile, additional, Wademan, Dillon T., additional, Makanda, Goodman, additional, Tisile, Phumeza, additional, Schoeman, Ingrid, additional, Hoddinott, Graeme, additional, and Nathavitharana, Ruvandhi R., additional
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- 2022
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10. Women's sexual scripting in the context of universal access to antiretroviral treatment-findings from the HPTN 071 (PopART) trial in South Africa
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Viljoen, Lario, Hoddinott, Graeme, Malunga, Samantha, Vanqa, Nosivuyile, Mhlakwaphalwa, Tembeka, Marthinus, Arlene, Mcimeli, Khanyisa, Bond, Virginia, Seeley, Janet, Bock, Peter, Hayes, Richard, Reynolds, Lindsey, and HPTN 071 (PopART) study team
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: HIV treatment-based prevention modalities present new opportunities for women to make decisions around sex, intimacy, and prevention. The Universal test and treat (UTT) strategy, where widespread HIV testing is implemented and all people with HIV can access treatment, has the potential to change how sex is understood and HIV prevention incorporated into sexual relationships. We use the frame of sexual scripting to explore how women attribute meaning to sex relative to UTT in an HIV prevention trial setting. Exploring women's sexual narratives, we explored how HIV prevention feature in the sexual scripts for women who had access to UTT in South Africa (prior to treatment guideline changes) and increased HIV prevention messaging, compared to places without widespread access to HIV testing and immediate access to treatment. METHODS: We employed a two-phased thematic analysis to explore longitudinal qualitative data collected from 71 women (18-35 years old) between 2016 and 2018 as part of an HIV prevention trial in the Western Cape Province, South Africa. Of the participants, 58/71 (82%) were from intervention communities while 13/71 (18%) lived in control communities without access to UTT. Twenty participants self-disclosed that they were living with HIV. RESULTS: We found no narrative differences between women who had access to UTT and those who did not. HIV and HIV prevention, including treatment-based prevention modalities, were largely absent from women's thinking about sex. In their scripts, women idealised romantic sex, positioned sex as 'about relationships', and described risky sex as 'other'. When women were confronted by HIV risk (for example, when a partner disclosed his HIV-positive status) this created a point of disjuncture between this new perception of risk and their accepted relationship scripts. CONCLUSION: These findings suggest that HIV-negative women did not include their partners' use of antiretroviral therapy in their sexual partnership choices. For these women, the preventive benefits of UTT are experienced passively-through community-wide viral suppression-rather than through their own behaviour change explicitly related to the availability of treatment as prevention. We propose that prevention-based modalities should be made available and supported and framed as an intervention to promote relationship well-being.
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- 2021
11. Linkage to TB care: A qualitative study to understand linkage from the patients’ perspective in the Western Cape Province, South Africa
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Vanqa, Nosivuyile, primary, Hoddinott, Graeme, additional, Mbenyana, Baxolele, additional, Osman, Muhammad, additional, and Meehan, Sue-Ann, additional
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- 2021
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12. Work and home productivity of people living with HIV in Zambia and South Africa
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Thomas, Ranjeeta, Friebel, Rocco, Barker, Kerrie, Mwenge, Lawrence, Kanema, Sarah, Vanqa, Nosivuyile, Harper, Abigail, Bell-Mandla, Nomtha, Smith, Peter C, Floyd, Sian, Bock, Peter, Ayles, Helen, Fidler, Sarah, Hayes, Richard, Hauck, Katharina, HPTN 071 (PopART) Study Team, National Institute for Health Research, Pepfar, NIAID, NIMH, NIDA, BMGF, Medical Research Council (MRC), Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust- BRC Funding, National Institutes of Health, and Department for International Development (UK) (DFI
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Male ,ABSENTEEISM ,0301 basic medicine ,IMPACT ,Cross-sectional study ,COUNT ,Psychological intervention ,Ethnic group ,HIV Infections ,Efficiency ,informal sector ,South Africa ,INITIATION ,0302 clinical medicine ,ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY ,RA0421 Public health. Hygiene. Preventive Medicine ,Health care ,Immunology and Allergy ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Young adult ,10. No inequality ,11 Medical and Health Sciences ,education.field_of_study ,LABOR PRODUCTIVITY ,1. No poverty ,virus diseases ,Recreational drug use ,sickness days ,17 Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,3. Good health ,AIDS ,Infectious Diseases ,Geography ,ComputingMethodologies_DOCUMENTANDTEXTPROCESSING ,HIV/AIDS ,Female ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,Adult ,Adolescent ,Epidemiology and Social ,Immunology ,Population ,Zambia ,labour productivity ,Biostatistics ,HPTN 071 (PopART) Study Team ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Virology ,Humans ,COHORT ,education ,Science & Technology ,business.industry ,economics ,PERFORMANCE ,06 Biological Sciences ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,030104 developmental biology ,business ,Demography - Abstract
Supplemental Digital Content is available in the text, Objective: To compare number of days lost to illness or accessing healthcare for HIV-positive and HIV-negative individuals working in the informal and formal sectors in South Africa and Zambia. Design: As part of the HPTN 071 (PopART) study, data on adults aged 18–44 years were gathered from cross-sectional surveys of random general population samples in 21 communities in Zambia and South Africa. Data on the number of productive days lost in the last 3 months, laboratory-confirmed HIV status, labour force status, age, ethnicity, education, and recreational drug use was collected. Methods: Differences in productive days lost between HIV-negative and HIV-positive individuals (’excess productive days lost’) were estimated with negative binomial models, and results disaggregated for HIV-positive individuals after various durations on antiretroviral treatment (ART). Results: From samples of 19 330 respondents in Zambia and 18 004 respondents in South Africa, HIV-positive individuals lost more productive days to illness than HIV-negative individuals in both countries. HIV-positive individuals in Zambia lost 0.74 excess productive days [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.48–1.01; P
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- 2019
13. 'Being seen' at the clinic: Zambian and South African health worker reflections on the relationship between health facility spatial organisation and items and HIV stigma in 21 health facilities, the HPTN 071 (PopART) study
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Bond, Virginia, Nomsenge, Sinazo, Mwamba, Monde, Ziba, Daniel, Birch, Alice, Mubekapi-Musadaidzwa, Constance, Vanqa, Nosivuyile, Viljoen, Lario, Pliakas, Triantafyllos, Ayles, Helen, Hargreaves, James, Hoddinott, Graeme, Stangl, Anne, Seeley, Janet, and HPTN 071 (PopART) study team
- Abstract
Health workers in 21 government health facilities in Zambia and South Africa linked spatial organisation of HIV services and material items signifying HIV-status (for example, coloured client cards) to the risk of People Living with HIV (PLHIV) 'being seen' or identified by others. Demarcated HIV services, distinctive client flow and associated-items were considered especially distinguishing. Strategies to circumvent any resulting stigma mostly involved PLHIV avoiding and/or reducing contact with services and health workers reducing visibility of PLHIV through alterations to structures, items and systems. HIV spatial organisation and item adjustments, enacting PLHIV-friendly policies and wider stigma reduction initiatives could combined reduce risks of identification and enhance the privacy of health facility space and diminish stigma.
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- 2018
14. Differences in health-related quality of life between HIV-positive and HIV-negative people in Zambia and South Africa: a cross-sectional baseline survey of the HPTN 071 (PopART) trial
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Thomas, Ranjeeta, primary, Burger, Ronelle, additional, Harper, Abigail, additional, Kanema, Sarah, additional, Mwenge, Lawrence, additional, Vanqa, Nosivuyile, additional, Bell-Mandla, Nomtha, additional, Smith, Peter C, additional, Floyd, Sian, additional, Bock, Peter, additional, Ayles, Helen, additional, Beyers, Nulda, additional, Donnell, Deborah, additional, Fidler, Sarah, additional, Hayes, Richard, additional, Hauck, Katharina, additional, Hargreaves, James, additional, Watson-Jones, Deborah, additional, Godfrey-Faussett, Peter, additional, Cori, Anne, additional, Pickles, Mike, additional, Mandla, Nomtha, additional, Yang, Blia, additional, James, Anelet, additional, Vermaak, Redwaan, additional, Makola, Nozizwe, additional, Hoddinott, Graeme, additional, Naidoo, Vikesh, additional, Bond, Virginia, additional, Simwinga, Musonda, additional, Mwinga, Alwyn, additional, Kosloff, Barry, additional, Limbada, Mohammed, additional, Bwalya, Justin, additional, Ngulube, Chepela, additional, Fraser, Christophe, additional, Eshleman, Susan, additional, Agyei, Yaw, additional, Cummings, Vanessa, additional, Catalano, Denni, additional, Emel, Lynda, additional, Bunts, Lisa, additional, Noble, Heather, additional, Burns, David, additional, Kouda, Alain, additional, Sista, Niru, additional, Moore, Ayana, additional, White, Rhonda, additional, Headen, Tanette, additional, Miller, Eric, additional, Hinson, Kathy, additional, Vermund, Sten, additional, Barnes, Mark, additional, Horn, Lyn, additional, Mwango, Albert, additional, Baldwin, Megan, additional, Wolf, Shauna, additional, and Hughes, Erin, additional
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- 2017
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15. Differences in health-related quality of life between HIV-positive and HIV-negative people in Zambia and South Africa: a cross-sectional baseline survey of the HPTN 071 (PopART) trial
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Thomas, Ranjeeta, Burger, Ronelle, Harper, Abigail, Kanema, Sarah, Mwenge, Lawrence, Vanqa, Nosivuyile, Bell-Mandla, Nomtha, Smith, Peter C, Floyd, Sian, Bock, Peter, Ayles, Helen, Beyers, Nulda, Donnell, Deborah, Fidler, Sarah, Hayes, Richard, Hauck, Katharina, and HPTN 071 (PopART) Study Team
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virus diseases - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The life expectancy of HIV-positive individuals receiving antiretroviral therapy (ART) is approaching that of HIV-negative people. However, little is known about how these populations compare in terms of health-related quality of life (HRQoL). We aimed to compare HRQoL between HIV-positive and HIV-negative people in Zambia and South Africa. METHODS: As part of the HPTN 071 (PopART) study, data from adults aged 18-44 years were gathered between Nov 28, 2013, and March 31, 2015, in large cross-sectional surveys of random samples of the general population in 21 communities in Zambia and South Africa. HRQoL data were collected with a standardised generic measure of health across five domains. We used β-distributed multivariable models to analyse differences in HRQoL scores between HIV-negative and HIV-positive individuals who were unaware of their status; aware, but not in HIV care; in HIV care, but who had not initiated ART; on ART for less than 5 years; and on ART for 5 years or more. We included controls for sociodemographic variables, herpes simplex virus type-2 status, and recreational drug use. FINDINGS: We obtained data for 19 750 respondents in Zambia and 18 941 respondents in South Africa. Laboratory-confirmed HIV status was available for 19 330 respondents in Zambia and 18 004 respondents in South Africa; 4128 (21%) of these 19 330 respondents in Zambia and 4012 (22%) of 18 004 respondents in South Africa had laboratory-confirmed HIV. We obtained complete HRQoL information for 19 637 respondents in Zambia and 18 429 respondents in South Africa. HRQoL scores did not differ significantly between individuals who had initiated ART more than 5 years previously and HIV-negative individuals, neither in Zambia (change in mean score -0·002, 95% CI -0·01 to 0·001; p=0·219) nor in South Africa (0·000, -0·002 to 0·003; p=0·939). However, scores did differ between HIV-positive individuals who had initiated ART less than 5 years previously and HIV-negative individuals in Zambia (-0·006, 95% CI -0·008 to -0·003; p
16. Work and home productivity of people living with HIV in Zambia and South Africa
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Thomas, Ranjeeta, Friebel, Rocco, Barker, Kerrie, Mwenge, Lawrence, Kanema, Sarah, Vanqa, Nosivuyile, Harper, Abigail, Bell-Mandla, Nomtha, Smith, Peter C., Floyd, Sian, Bock, Peter, Ayles, Helen, Fidler, Sarah, Hayes, Richard, Hauck, Katharina, Team, on behalf of the HPTN 071 (PopART) Study, Thomas, Ranjeeta, Friebel, Rocco, Barker, Kerrie, Mwenge, Lawrence, Kanema, Sarah, Vanqa, Nosivuyile, Harper, Abigail, Bell-Mandla, Nomtha, Smith, Peter C., Floyd, Sian, Bock, Peter, Ayles, Helen, Fidler, Sarah, Hayes, Richard, Hauck, Katharina, and Team, on behalf of the HPTN 071 (PopART) Study
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To compare number of days lost to illness or accessing healthcare for HIV-positive and HIV-negative individuals working in the informal and formal sectors in South Africa and Zambia. DESIGN: As part of the HPTN 071 (PopART) study, data on adults aged 18-44 years were gathered from cross-sectional surveys of random general population samples in 21 communities in Zambia and South Africa. Data on the number of productive days lost in the last 3 months, laboratory-confirmed HIV status, labour force status, age, ethnicity, education, and recreational drug use was collected. METHODS: Differences in productive days lost between HIV-negative and HIV-positive individuals ('excess productive days lost') were estimated with negative binomial models, and results disaggregated for HIV-positive individuals after various durations on antiretroviral treatment (ART). RESULTS: From samples of 19 330 respondents in Zambia and 18 004 respondents in South Africa, HIV-positive individuals lost more productive days to illness than HIV-negative individuals in both countries. HIV-positive individuals in Zambia lost 0.74 excess productive days [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.48-1.01; P < 0.001] to illness over a 3-month period. HIV-positive in South Africa lost 0.13 excess days (95% CI 0.04-0.23; P = 0.007). In Zambia, those on ART for less than 1 year lost most days, and those not on ART lost fewest days. In South Africa, results disaggregated by treatment duration were not statistically significant. CONCLUSION: There is a loss of work and home productivity associated with HIV, but it is lower than existing estimates for HIV-positive formal sector workers. The findings support policy makers in building an accurate investment case for HIV interventions.
17. "As a patient I do not belong to the clinic, I belong to the community." Co-developing a multi-level, person-centred tuberculosis stigma intervention in Cape Town, South Africa.
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Hayward SE, Vanqa N, Makanda G, Tisile P, Ngwatyu L, Foster I, Mcinziba A, Biewer A, Mbuyamba R, Galloway M, Bunyula S, Westhuizen HM, Friedland JS, Marino-Medina A, Viljoen L, Schoeman I, Hoddinott G, and Nathavitharana RR
- Abstract
Background: Anticipated, internal, and enacted stigma are major barriers to TB care engagement, and directly impact patient well-being. Unfortunately, targeted stigma interventions are lacking. We aimed to co-develop a person-centred stigma intervention with TB-affected community members and health workers in South Africa., Methods: Using a community-based participatory research approach, we conducted ten group discussions with people diagnosed with TB (past or present), caregivers, and health workers (total n=87) in Khayelitsha, Cape Town. Group discussions were facilitated by TB survivors. Discussion guides explored experiences and drivers of stigma and used human-centred design principles to co-develop solutions. Recordings were transcribed, coded, thematically analysed and then further interpreted using the socio-ecological model., Results: Intervention components across socio-ecological levels shared common behaviour change strategies, namely education, empowerment, engagement, and innovation. At the individual level, participants recommended counselling to improve TB knowledge and provide ongoing support. TB survivors can guide messaging to nurture stigma resilience by highlighting that TB can affect anyone and is curable, and provide lived experiences of TB to decrease internal stigma. At the interpersonal level, support clubs and family-centred counselling were suggested to dispel TB-related myths and foster support. At the institutional level, health worker stigma reduction training informed by TB survivor perspectives was recommended. Consideration of how integration of TB/HIV care services may exacerbate TB/HIV intersectional stigma and ideas for restructured service delivery models were suggested to decrease anticipated and enacted stigma. At the community level, participants recommended awareness-raising events led by TB survivors, including TB information in school curricula. At the policy level, solutions focused on reducing the visibility generated by a TB diagnosis and resultant stigma in health facilities and shifting tasks to community health workers., Conclusions: Decreasing TB stigma requires a multi-level approach. Co-developing a person-centred intervention with affected communities is feasible and generates stigma intervention components that are directed and implementable. Such community-informed intervention components should be prioritised by TB programs, including integrated TB/HIV care services., Competing Interests: Table 1 Table 1 is available in the Supplementary Files section. Conflicts of Interest: None
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- 2024
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18. Reducing Initial Loss to Follow-up Among People With Bacteriologically Confirmed Tuberculosis: LINKEDin, a Quasi-experimental Study in South Africa.
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Meehan SA, Hesseling AC, Boulle A, Chetty J, Connell L, Dlamini-Miti NJ, Dunbar R, Du Preez K, George G, Hoddinott G, Jennings K, Marx FM, Mudaly V, Naidoo P, Ndlovu N, Ngozo J, Smith M, Strauss M, Tanna G, Vanqa N, von Delft A, and Osman M
- Abstract
Every person diagnosed with tuberculosis (TB) needs to initiate treatment. The World Health Organization estimated that 61% of people who developed TB in 2021 were included in a TB treatment registration system. Initial loss to follow-up (ILTFU) is the loss of persons to care between diagnosis and treatment initiation/registration. LINKEDin, a quasi-experimental study, evaluated the effect of 2 interventions (hospital recording and an alert-and-response patient management intervention) in 6 subdistricts across 3 high-TB burden provinces of South Africa. Using integrated electronic reports, we identified all persons diagnosed with TB (Xpert MTB/RIF positive) in the hospital and at primary health care facilities. We prospectively determined linkage to care at 30 days after TB diagnosis. We calculated the risk of ILTFU during the baseline and intervention periods and the relative risk reduction in ILTFU between these periods. We found a relative reduction in ILTFU of 42.4% (95% CI, 28.5%-53.7%) in KwaZulu Natal (KZN) and 22.3% (95% CI, 13.3%-30.4%) in the Western Cape (WC), with no significant change in Gauteng. In KZN and the WC, the relative reduction in ILTFU appeared greater in subdistricts where the alert-and-response patient management intervention was implemented (KZN: 49.3%; 95% CI, 32.4%-62%; vs 32.2%; 95% CI, 5.4%-51.4%; and WC: 34.2%; 95% CI, 20.9%-45.3%; vs 13.4%; 95% CI, 0.7%-24.4%). We reported a notable reduction in ILTFU in 2 provinces using existing routine health service data and applying a simple intervention to trace and recall those not linked to care. TB programs need to consider ILTFU a priority and develop interventions specific to their context to ensure improved linkage to care., Competing Interests: Potential conflicts of interest. All authors report no potential conflicts., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America.)
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- 2023
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19. "This is an illness. No one is supposed to be treated badly": Community-based stigma assessments in South Africa to inform TB stigma intervention design.
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Foster I, Biewer A, Vanqa N, Makanda G, Tisile P, Hayward SE, Wademan DT, Anthony MG, Mbuyamba R, Galloway M, Human W, Westhuizen HM, Friedland JS, Marino-Medina A, Schoeman I, Hoddinott G, and Nathavitharana RR
- Abstract
Background: Though TB-related stigma is a recognized barrier to care, interventions are lacking and gaps remain in understanding the drivers and experiences of TB-related stigma. We undertook community-based mixed methods stigma assessments to inform stigma intervention design., Methods: We adapted the Stop TB Partnership stigma assessment tool, and trained three peer research associates (PRAs; two TB survivors, one community health worker) to conduct surveys with people with TB (PWTB, n=93) and caregivers of children with TB (n=24) at peri-urban and rural clinic sites in Khayelitsha, Western Cape, and Hammanskraal, Gauteng Province, South Africa. We descriptively analyzed responses for each stigma experience (anticipated, internal, and enacted), calculated stigma scores, and undertook generalized linear regression analysis. We further conducted 25 in-depth interviews with PWTB (n=22) and caregivers TB (n=3). Using inductive thematic analysis, we performed open coding to identify emergent themes, and selective coding to identify relevant quotes. Themes were organised using the CARD (Constraints, Actions, Risks and Desires) framework., Results: Surveys revealed at least one-third of PWTB and one-quarter of caregivers report experiences of anticipated, internal, and/or enacted stigma, which affected engagement throughout the care cascade. Participants in rural locations (compared to peri-urban) reported higher anticipated, internal, and enacted stigma (β-coefficient 0.72, 0.71, and 0.74). Interview participants described how stigma experiences, including HIV intersectional stigma, act individually and in concert as key constraints to impede care, and underpins failure to disclose a TB diagnosis, isolation, and exclusion. Stigma resilience arose through understanding that TB can affect anyone and should not diminish self-worth. Risks of stigma, driven by fears related to disease severity and infectiousness, led to care disengagement and impaired psychological wellbeing. Participants desired counselling, identifying a specific role for TB survivors as peer counsellors, and community education., Conclusions: Stigma is highly prevalent and negatively impacts TB care and the well-being of PWTB, warranting its assessment as a primary outcome indicator rather than intermediary contributor to poor cascade outcomes. Multicomponent stigma interventions are needed, including counselling for PWTB and education for health workers and communities. Such interventions must incorporate contextual differences based on gender or setting, and use survivor-guided messaging to foster stigma resilience., Competing Interests: Declarations Conflicts of Interest: None
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- 2023
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20. Women's sexual scripting in the context of universal access to antiretroviral treatment-findings from the HPTN 071 (PopART) trial in South Africa.
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Viljoen L, Hoddinott G, Malunga S, Vanqa N, Mhlakwaphalwa T, Marthinus A, Mcimeli K, Bond V, Seeley J, Bock P, Hayes R, and Reynolds L
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Sexual Behavior, Sexual Partners, South Africa, Young Adult, Anti-Retroviral Agents therapeutic use, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: HIV treatment-based prevention modalities present new opportunities for women to make decisions around sex, intimacy, and prevention. The Universal test and treat (UTT) strategy, where widespread HIV testing is implemented and all people with HIV can access treatment, has the potential to change how sex is understood and HIV prevention incorporated into sexual relationships. We use the frame of sexual scripting to explore how women attribute meaning to sex relative to UTT in an HIV prevention trial setting. Exploring women's sexual narratives, we explored how HIV prevention feature in the sexual scripts for women who had access to UTT in South Africa (prior to treatment guideline changes) and increased HIV prevention messaging, compared to places without widespread access to HIV testing and immediate access to treatment., Methods: We employed a two-phased thematic analysis to explore longitudinal qualitative data collected from 71 women (18-35 years old) between 2016 and 2018 as part of an HIV prevention trial in the Western Cape Province, South Africa. Of the participants, 58/71 (82%) were from intervention communities while 13/71 (18%) lived in control communities without access to UTT. Twenty participants self-disclosed that they were living with HIV., Results: We found no narrative differences between women who had access to UTT and those who did not. HIV and HIV prevention, including treatment-based prevention modalities, were largely absent from women's thinking about sex. In their scripts, women idealised romantic sex, positioned sex as 'about relationships', and described risky sex as 'other'. When women were confronted by HIV risk (for example, when a partner disclosed his HIV-positive status) this created a point of disjuncture between this new perception of risk and their accepted relationship scripts., Conclusion: These findings suggest that HIV-negative women did not include their partners' use of antiretroviral therapy in their sexual partnership choices. For these women, the preventive benefits of UTT are experienced passively-through community-wide viral suppression-rather than through their own behaviour change explicitly related to the availability of treatment as prevention. We propose that prevention-based modalities should be made available and supported and framed as an intervention to promote relationship well-being., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2021
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