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Improved hypertension control at six months using an adapted WHO HEARTS-based implementation strategy at a large urban HIV clinic in Uganda

Authors :
Martin Muddu
Fred C. Semitala
Isaac Kimera
Mary Mbuliro
Rebecca Ssennyonjo
Simon P. Kigozi
Rodgers Katwesigye
Florence Ayebare
Christabellah Namugenyi
Frank Mugabe
Gerald Mutungi
Chris T. Longenecker
Anne R. Katahoire
Isaac Ssinabulya
Jeremy I. Schwartz
Source :
BMC health services research. 22(1)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Objectives To adapt a World Health Organization HEARTS-based implementation strategy for hypertension (HTN) control at a large urban HIV clinic in Uganda and determine six-month HTN and HIV outcomes among a cohort of adult persons living with HIV (PLHIV). Methods Our implementation strategy included six elements: health education, medication adherence, and lifestyle counseling; routine HTN screening; task shifting of HTN treatment; evidence-based HTN treatment protocol; consistent supply of HTN medicines free to patients; and inclusion of HTN-specific monitoring and evaluation tools. We conducted a pre-post study from October 2019 to March 2020 to determine the effect of this strategy on HTN and HIV outcomes at baseline and six months. Our cohort comprised adult PLHIV diagnosed with HTN who made at least one clinic visit within two months prior to study onset. Findings We enrolled 1,015 hypertensive PLHIV. The mean age was 50.1 ± 9.5 years and 62.6% were female. HTN outcomes improved between baseline and six months: mean systolic BP (154.3 ± 20.0 to 132.3 ± 13.8 mmHg, p p p 95% at baseline and six months) and viral suppression was unchanged (98.7% to 99.2%, p = 0.712). Taking ART for more than two years and HIV viral suppression were independent predictors of HTN control at six months. Conclusions A HEARTS-based implementation strategy at a large, urban HIV center facilitates integration of HTN and HIV care and improves HTN outcomes while sustaining HIV control. Further implementation research is needed to study HTN/HIV integration in varied clinical settings among diverse populations.

Details

ISSN :
14726963
Volume :
22
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMC health services research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2112fe9f37f27dfba3d157939dae86ce