Lubinga S J, Kintu A, Atuhaire J, Asiimwe S
Department of Pharmacy, Mbarara University of Science and Technology, Mbarara, Uganda.
AIDS Care. 2012;24(11):1375-83. doi: 10.1080/09540121.2011.648600. Epub 2012 Jan 31.
Use of herbal medicines among patients receiving Anti-retroviral Therapy (ART) remains by far an uncharacterised phenomenon in Africa and Uganda specifically. We evaluated the use of herbal medicines among patients on ART at the HIV clinic of Mbarara Regional Referral Hospital (MRRH), examined factors associated with their concomitant use and their impact on ART adherence. This was a cross-sectional study among 334 systematically sampled patients receiving ART at the HIV clinic of MRRH from February to April 2010. We collected data on patient demographics, clinical characteristics, perceptions of quality of care received, self-perceived health status, information on ART received, herbal medicines use and ART adherence. Study outcomes were concomitant herbal medicine and ART use, and ART adherence. Descriptive analysis and logistic regression were conducted using Stata10.0. Close to half, 155 (46.4%) reported concomitant herbal medicines and ART use, with 133 (39.8%) using herbal medicines at least once daily. Most (71.6%) used herbal medicines to treat HIV-related symptoms. A majority (92.3%) reported that the doctors were unaware of their use of herbal medicines, 68.5% citing its minimal importance to the attending physician. Most frequently used herbs were Aloe vera (25%) and Vernonia amygdalina (21%). Time since start of ART (OR 1.14 95% CI: 1.01-1.28, for each one year increase), number of ART side effects reported (≥3 vs.≤1, OR 2.20 95% CI 1.13-4.26) and self-perceived health status (Good vs. Poor, OR 0.31 95% CI 0.12-0.79) were independently associated with concomitant herbal medicine and ART use. Concomitant herbal medicine and ART use was not associated with poor ART adherence (OR 0.85 95% CI 0.47-1.53). There is widespread concomitant herbal medicines and ART use among our patients, with no association to poor ART adherence. Patients appear to use these therapies to complement as opposed to substituting ART.
在接受抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)的患者中,使用草药的情况在非洲尤其是乌干达仍是一种尚未得到充分描述的现象。我们评估了姆巴拉拉地区转诊医院(MRRH)艾滋病毒诊所中接受ART治疗的患者使用草药的情况,研究了与同时使用草药相关的因素及其对ART依从性的影响。这是一项横断面研究,于2010年2月至4月对MRRH艾滋病毒诊所中334名系统抽样的接受ART治疗的患者进行。我们收集了患者的人口统计学数据、临床特征、对所接受护理质量的看法、自我感知的健康状况、所接受ART的信息、草药使用情况以及ART依从性。研究结果包括同时使用草药和ART以及ART依从性。使用Stata10.0进行描述性分析和逻辑回归。近一半,即155名(46.4%)报告同时使用草药和ART,其中133名(39.8%)每天至少使用一次草药。大多数(71.6%)使用草药治疗与艾滋病毒相关的症状。大多数(92.3%)报告医生不知道他们使用草药,68.5%称这对主治医生不太重要。最常使用的草药是芦荟(25%)和扁桃斑鸠菊(21%)。开始ART治疗后的时间(每增加一年,OR为1.14,95%CI:1.01 - 1.28)、报告的ART副作用数量(≥3与≤1相比,OR为2.20,95%CI为1.13 - 4.26)以及自我感知的健康状况(良好与不佳相比,OR为0.31,95%CI为0.12 - 0.79)与同时使用草药和ART独立相关。同时使用草药和ART与ART依从性差无关(OR为0.85,95%CI为0.47 - 1.53)。在我们的患者中,同时使用草药和ART的情况很普遍,但与ART依从性差无关。患者似乎使用这些疗法是为了辅助而不是替代ART。