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A systematic review comparing antiretroviral adherence descriptive and intervention studies conducted in the USA.

Authors :
Sandelowski, Margarete
Voils, CorrineI.
Chang, Yunkyung
Lee, Eun-Jeong
Source :
AIDS Care; Aug2009, Vol. 21 Issue 8, p953-966, 14p, 2 Charts
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

We examined the extent to which studies aimed at testing interventions to improve antiretroviral adherence have targeted the facilitators of and barriers known to affect adherence. Of the 88 reports reviewed, 41 were reports of descriptive studies conducted with US HIV-positive women and 47 were reports of intervention studies conducted with US HIV-positive persons. We extracted from the descriptive studies all findings addressing any factor linked to antiretroviral adherence and from the intervention studies, information on the nature of the intervention, the adherence problem targeted, the persons targeted for the intervention, and the intervention outcomes desired. We discerned congruence between the prominence of substance abuse as a factor identified in the descriptive studies as a barrier to adherence and its prominence as the problem most addressed in those reports of intervention studies that specified the problems targeted for intervention. We also discerned congruence between the prominence of family and provider support as factors identified in the descriptive studies as facilitators of adherence and the presence of social support as an intervention component and outcome variable. Less discernible in the reports of intervention studies was specific attention to other factors prominent in the descriptive studies, which may be due to the complex nature of the problem, individualistic and rationalist slant of interventions, or simply the ways interventions were presented. Our review raises issues about niche standardization and intervention tailoring, targeting, and fidelity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09540121
Volume :
21
Issue :
8
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
AIDS Care
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
44219109
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/09540120802626212