Département de médecine sociale et préventive, École de Santé Publique, Université de Montréal, Pavillon 7101, Avenue du Parc, Montréal, QC, H3N 1X7, Canada.
Centre de recherche en santé publique (CReSP), Université de Montréal et CIUSSS du Centre-Sud-de-l'Île-de-Montréal, Montréal, QC, H3L 1M3, Canada.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2020 Jun 26;20(1):582. doi: 10.1186/s12913-020-05381-5.
Integrating Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission (PMTCT) programmes into routine health services under complex socio-political and health system conditions is a priority and a challenge. The successful rollout of PMTCT in sub-Saharan Africa has decreased Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), reduced child mortality and improved maternal health. In South Africa, PMTCT is now integrated into existing primary health care (PHC) services and this experience could serve as a relevant example for integrating other programmes into comprehensive primary care. This study explored the perspectives of both experts or key informants and frontline health workers (FHCWs) in South Africa on PMTCT integration into PHC in the context of post-AIDS denialism using a Complex Adaptive Systems framework.
A total of 20 in-depth semi-structured interviews were conducted; 10 with experts including national and international health systems and HIV/PMTCT policy makers and researchers, and 10 FHCWs including clinic managers, nurses and midwives. All interviews were conducted in person, audio-recorded and transcribed. Three investigators collaborated in coding transcripts and used an iterative approach for thematic analysis.
Experts and FHCWs agreed on the importance of integrated PMTCT services. Experts reported a slow and partial integration of PMTCT programmes into PHC following its initial rollout as a stand-alone programme in the aftermath of the AIDS denialism period. Experts and FHCWs diverged on the challenges associated with integration of PMTCT. Experts highlighted bureaucracy, HIV stigma and discrimination and a shortage of training for staff as major barriers to PMTCT integration. In comparison, FHCWs emphasized high workloads, staff turnover and infrastructural issues (e.g., lack of rooms, small spaces) as their main challenges to integration. Both experts and FHCWs suggested that working with community health workers, particularly in the post-partum period, helped to address cases of loss to follow-up of women and their babies and to improve linkages to polymerase-chain reaction (PCR) testing and immunisation.
Despite organised efforts in South Africa, experts and FHCWs reported multiple barriers for the full integration of PMTCT in PHC, especially postpartum. The results suggest opportunities to address operational challenges towards more integrated PMTCT and other health services in order to improve maternal and child health.
在复杂的社会政治和卫生系统条件下,将预防母婴传播(PMTCT)项目纳入常规卫生服务是当务之急,也是一项挑战。在撒哈拉以南非洲地区,成功开展 PMTCT 项目降低了艾滋病毒(HIV)的传播率,降低了儿童死亡率,改善了母婴健康状况。在南非,PMTCT 现在已经纳入现有的初级卫生保健(PHC)服务,这一经验可以为将其他项目纳入综合初级保健提供相关范例。本研究使用复杂适应系统框架,探索了南非专家或关键信息提供者以及一线卫生工作者(FHCWs)对 PMTCT 在艾滋病否认主义背景下纳入 PHC 的看法。
共进行了 20 次深入的半结构式访谈,其中 10 次访谈对象为专家,包括国家和国际卫生系统以及 HIV/PMTCT 政策制定者和研究人员,10 次访谈对象为 FHCWs,包括诊所经理、护士和助产士。所有访谈均以面对面的方式进行,录音并转录。三名调查员合作对转录本进行编码,并使用迭代方法进行主题分析。
专家和 FHCWs 都认为综合 PMTCT 服务很重要。专家报告称,在艾滋病否认主义时期之后,作为一个独立的项目推出的 PMTCT 项目,其在 PHC 中的整合速度缓慢且不完整。专家和 FHCWs 在与 PMTCT 整合相关的挑战上存在分歧。专家强调官僚主义、艾滋病毒耻辱和歧视以及工作人员培训不足是 PMTCT 整合的主要障碍。相比之下,FHCWs 则强调工作量大、人员流动和基础设施问题(例如,缺乏房间、空间小)是整合的主要挑战。专家和 FHCWs 都认为,与社区卫生工作者合作,特别是在产后期间,有助于解决妇女及其婴儿失访的情况,并改善与聚合酶链反应(PCR)检测和免疫接种的联系。
尽管南非进行了有组织的努力,但专家和 FHCWs 报告说,PMTCT 在 PHC 中的全面整合仍存在多种障碍,尤其是在产后期间。结果表明,有机会解决运营方面的挑战,以实现更综合的 PMTCT 和其他卫生服务的整合,从而改善母婴健康状况。