Department of Social Sciences, University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium.
School of Public Health, University of the Western Cape, Cape Town, South Africa.
Trials. 2020 Feb 10;21(1):154. doi: 10.1186/s13063-020-4082-0.
With 7.7 million South Africans currently infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and 4.8 million currently receiving antiretroviral treatment (ART), the epidemic represents a considerable burden for the country's resource-limited health system. In response to the health and human resource shortages, task shifting to community health workers (CHWs) and empowering people living with HIV (PLWH) are integral parts of a sustainable ART strategy. Despite the success of the ART programme, South Africa still faces both prevention and treatment challenges. To tackle these challenges, future endeavours need to focus on the role played by the households of PLWH in mediating between the community and PLWH themselves. Building health-enabling "HIV competent" households with the capacity to actively stimulate lifestyles that foster health, offers a potential strategy to tackle South Africa's HIV-related challenges. The aim of the "Sinako: Households and HIV" study is to investigate to what extent and how an intervention can increase HIV competence in PLWH and their households, and subsequently optimise the impact of CHW support on individual ART outcomes.
The "Sinako" study is a cluster-randomised controlled trial with two arms. In the control arm, CHWs offer a standard package of support to PLWH during home visits, focused on the individual. The intervention arm includes both a focus on the individual and the household to enable the patient to self-manage their treatment within an HIV competent household. A longitudinal mixed methods design is adopted to analyse the data. For the quantitative data analysis, methods including latent cross-lagged modelling, multilevel modelling and logistic regression will be used. To assess the acceptability and feasibility of the intervention and to construct a comprehensive picture of the mechanisms underlying the impact on the household and the PLWH, qualitative data (in-depth interviews and focus group discussions) will be collected and analysed.
Stimulating HIV competence in households could be a feasible and sustainable strategy to optimise the outcomes of CHW interventions and thus be important for HIV treatment interventions in resource-limited settings.
Pan African Clinical Trial Registry, PACTR201906476052236. Registered on 24 June 2019.
目前,南非有 770 万艾滋病毒(HIV)感染者,480 万人正在接受抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART),这给该国资源有限的卫生系统带来了相当大的负担。为了应对卫生和人力资源短缺问题,向社区卫生工作者(CHW)转移任务和赋予艾滋病毒感染者(PLWH)权力是可持续 ART 战略的重要组成部分。尽管抗逆转录病毒治疗方案取得了成功,但南非仍然面临着预防和治疗方面的挑战。为了解决这些挑战,未来的努力需要关注 PLWH 家庭在社区和 PLWH 之间发挥的作用。建立有能力积极促进促进健康的生活方式的健康促进“艾滋病毒能力”家庭,是解决南非与艾滋病毒相关挑战的一种潜在策略。“Sinako:家庭与艾滋病毒”研究的目的是调查干预措施在何种程度上以及如何提高 PLWH 和他们家庭的艾滋病毒能力,从而优化 CHW 支持对个人 ART 结果的影响。
“Sinako”研究是一项两臂的集群随机对照试验。在对照组中,CHW 在家庭访视中向 PLWH 提供标准的支持包,重点关注个人。干预组包括对个人和家庭的关注,使患者能够在一个有“艾滋病毒能力”的家庭中自我管理治疗。采用纵向混合方法设计来分析数据。对于定量数据分析,将使用潜在交叉滞后建模、多层次建模和逻辑回归等方法。为了评估干预措施的可接受性和可行性,并构建一个关于家庭和 PLWH 影响机制的综合图景,将收集和分析定性数据(深入访谈和焦点小组讨论)。
激发家庭的艾滋病毒能力可能是优化 CHW 干预措施结果的一种可行且可持续的策略,因此对资源有限环境中的艾滋病毒治疗干预措施很重要。
泛非临床试验注册处,PACTR201906476052236。于 2019 年 6 月 24 日注册。