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Feasibility and Acceptability of a Task-Shifted Intervention to Enhance Adherence to HIV Medication and Improve Depression in People Living with HIV in Zimbabwe, a Low Income Country in Sub-Saharan Africa

Authors :
Nomvuyo Mothobi
Emily Saruchera
Jessica F. Magidson
Steven A. Safren
Tarisai Bere
Dixon Chibanda
Melanie Abas
Victoria Simms
Azure T. Makadzange
Kirsty Macpherson
Walter Mangezi
Natasha Croome
Primrose Nyamayaro
Conall O'Cleirigh
Source :
AIDS and Behavior, Abas, M, Nyamayaro, P, Bere, T, Saruchera, E, Mothobi, N, Simms, V, Mangezi, W, Macpherson, K, Croome, N, Magidson, J, Makadzange, A, Safren, S, Chibanda, D & O’Cleirigh, C 2017, ' Feasibility and Acceptability of a Task-Shifted Intervention to Enhance Adherence to HIV Medication and Improve Depression in People Living with HIV in Zimbabwe, a Low Income Country in Sub-Saharan Africa ', AIDS AND BEHAVIOR, pp. 1-16 . https://doi.org/10.1007/s10461-016-1659-4
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Springer (part of Springer Nature), 2017.

Abstract

Using a pilot trial design in an HIV care clinic in Zimbabwe, we randomised 32 adults with poor adherence to antiretroviral therapy and at least mild depression to either six sessions of Problem-Solving Therapy for adherence and depression (PST-AD) delivered by an adherence counsellor, or to Enhanced Usual Care (Control). Acceptability of PST-AD was high, as indicated by frequency of session attendance and through qualitative analyses of exit interviews. Fidelity was >80% for the first two sessions of PST-AD but fidelity to the adherence component of PST-AD dropped by session 4. Contamination occurred, in that seven patients in the control arm received one or two PST-AD sessions before follow-up assessment. Routine health records proved unreliable for measuring HIV viral load at follow-up. Barriers to measuring adherence electronically included device failure and participant perception of being helped by the research device. The study was not powered to detect clinical differences, however, promising change at 6-months follow-up was seen in electronic adherence, viral load suppression (PST-AD arm 9/12 suppressed; control arm 4/8 suppressed) and depression (Patient Health Questionnaire—4.7 points in PST-AD arm vs. control, adjusted p value = 0.01). Results inform and justify a future randomised controlled trial of task-shifted PST-AD.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10907165
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
AIDS and Behavior, Abas, M, Nyamayaro, P, Bere, T, Saruchera, E, Mothobi, N, Simms, V, Mangezi, W, Macpherson, K, Croome, N, Magidson, J, Makadzange, A, Safren, S, Chibanda, D & O’Cleirigh, C 2017, ' Feasibility and Acceptability of a Task-Shifted Intervention to Enhance Adherence to HIV Medication and Improve Depression in People Living with HIV in Zimbabwe, a Low Income Country in Sub-Saharan Africa ', AIDS AND BEHAVIOR, pp. 1-16 . https://doi.org/10.1007/s10461-016-1659-4
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ba561d2de0414cb2a1a225e26c46eed9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10461-016-1659-4