Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America.
Arthur Davison Children's Hospital, Ndola, Zambia.
PLoS One. 2021 Jun 9;16(6):e0252349. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0252349. eCollection 2021.
Adolescents and young adults (AYAs) living with HIV face unique challenges and have poorer health outcomes than adults with HIV. Project YES! was a youth-led initiative to promote HIV self-management and reduce stigma among AYAs in four Ndola, Zambia clinics. Clinic health care providers (HCPs) were involved in multiple intervention aspects, including serving as expert resources during AYA and caregiver group meetings, facilitating resistance test-based AYA antiretroviral drug changes, meeting with participants referred through a safety protocol, and guiding a subset of participants' physical transition from pediatric to adult clinic settings. This study aimed to understand HCP insights on facilitators and barriers to implementing Project YES! and scaling up a clinic-based, youth-focused program.
A trained interviewer conducted ten in-depth interviews with participating HCPs from November-December 2018 and analyzed data, identifying key themes. These themes were examined in terms of two implementation science outcomes-acceptability and feasibility-to inform scalability.
HCPs found peer mentoring valuable for AYAs with HIV and the bimonthly caregiver meetings beneficial to AYA caregivers. HCPs voiced a desire for more involvement in specific processes related to patient clinical care, such as drug changes. HCPs' experiences with the study safety protocol, including referrals for youth experiences of violence, shifted their views of AYAs and informed their understanding of key issues youth face. Considering this, many HCPs requested more resources to support AYAs' varied needs. HCPs noted limited time and clinic space as implementation barriers but felt the program was valuable overall.
HCPs concluded youth peer mentoring was highly acceptable and feasible, supporting scale-up of youth-led interventions addressing the multi-faceted needs of AYAs living with HIV. Continued provider involvement in resistance test-based antiretroviral drug changes, considered in the context of health system and clinic policy, would enhance long-term success of the program at scale.
与 HIV 共存的青少年和年轻人(AYAs)面临着独特的挑战,其健康状况比 HIV 成年患者差。Project YES! 是一项由年轻人主导的倡议,旨在促进 HIV 自我管理,并减少赞比亚恩多拉四个诊所中 AYAs 的耻辱感。诊所医护人员(HCPs)参与了多个干预方面,包括在 AYA 和照顾者小组会议期间担任专家资源,促进基于耐药测试的 AYA 抗逆转录病毒药物改变,与通过安全协议转介的参与者会面,并指导参与者的身体从儿科过渡到成人诊所环境。本研究旨在了解 HCPs 对实施 Project YES! 和扩大以诊所为基础、以年轻人为重点的项目的促进因素和障碍的看法。
一名经过培训的访谈者于 2018 年 11 月至 12 月对参与的 HCPs 进行了 10 次深入访谈,并对数据进行了分析,确定了关键主题。从实施科学的两个结果——可接受性和可行性的角度来看待这些主题,以提供可扩展性。
HCPs 发现同伴辅导对 HIV 青少年很有价值,双月一次的照顾者会议对 AYA 照顾者也很有益。HCPs 表示希望更多地参与与患者临床护理相关的特定流程,例如药物改变。HCPs 对研究安全协议的经验,包括对青少年遭受暴力经历的转介,改变了他们对 AYAs 的看法,并使他们了解了青年面临的关键问题。考虑到这一点,许多 HCPs 请求提供更多资源以满足 AYAs 的各种需求。HCPs 指出时间有限和诊所空间有限是实施障碍,但总体上认为该计划很有价值。
HCPs 总结说,青少年同伴辅导是高度可接受和可行的,支持扩大由年轻人主导的干预措施,以满足与 HIV 共存的 AYAs 的多方面需求。考虑到卫生系统和诊所政策的背景,继续让提供者参与基于耐药测试的抗逆转录病毒药物改变,将增强该计划在大规模推广时的长期成功。