Rutakumwa Rwamahe, Ssebunnya Joshua, Mugisha James, Mpango Richard Steven, Tusiime Christine, Kyohangirwe Leticia, Taasi Geoffrey, Sentongo Hafsa, Kaleebu Pontiano, Patel Vikram, Kinyanda Eugene
MRC/UVRI & LSHTM Uganda Research Unit & Senior Wellcome Trust Fellowship, Mental Health Section, 50-59 Nakiwogo Street, Entebbe, Uganda.
Butabika National Referral Mental Hospital, Old Port Bell Road, Kampala, Uganda.
Int J Ment Health Syst. 2021 Jul 1;15(1):63. doi: 10.1186/s13033-021-00486-8.
HIV/AIDS continues to be a major global public health problem with Eastern and Southern Africa being the regions most affected. With increased access to effective antiretroviral therapy, HIV has become a chronic and manageable disease, bringing to the fore issues of quality of life including mental wellbeing. Despite this, the majority of HIV care providers in sub-Saharan Africa, including Uganda's Ministry of Health, do not routinely provide mental health care including depression management. The purpose of this paper is to explore stakeholders' perspectives on the feasibility and acceptability of integrating depression management into routine adult HIV care. The paper addresses a specific objective of the formative phase of the HIV + D study aimed at developing and evaluating a model for integrating depression management into routine HIV care in Uganda.
This was a qualitative study. Data were collected through in-depth interviews with 11 patients at enrollment and follow-up in the pilot phase, and exit interviews with 11 adherent patients (those who completed their psychotherapy sessions) and six non-adherent patients (those missing at least two sessions) at the end of the pilot phase. Key informant interviews were held with four clinicians, five supervisors and one mental health specialist, as were three focus group discussions with lay health workers. These were purposively sampled at four public health facilities in Mpigi District. Data were analysed thematically.
Patients highlighted the benefits of treating depression in the context of HIV care, including improved adherence to antiretroviral therapy, overcoming sleeplessness and suicidal ideation, and regaining a sense of self-efficacy. Although clinicians and other stakeholders reported benefits of treating depression, they cited challenges in managing depression with HIV care, which were organisational (increased workload) and patient related (extended waiting time and perceptions of preferential treatment). Stakeholders generally shared perspectives on how best to integrate, including recommendations for organisational level interventions-training, harmonisation in scheduling appointments and structural changes-and patient level interventions to enhance knowledge about depression.
Integrating depression management into routine HIV care in Uganda is acceptable among key stakeholders, but the technical and operational feasibility of integration would require changes both at the organisational and patient levels.
艾滋病毒/艾滋病仍然是一个重大的全球公共卫生问题,东部和南部非洲是受影响最严重的地区。随着获得有效抗逆转录病毒疗法的机会增加,艾滋病毒已成为一种慢性且可控制的疾病,从而凸显了包括心理健康在内的生活质量问题。尽管如此,撒哈拉以南非洲的大多数艾滋病毒护理提供者,包括乌干达卫生部,并未常规提供包括抑郁症管理在内的心理健康护理。本文的目的是探讨利益相关者对将抑郁症管理纳入成人常规艾滋病毒护理的可行性和可接受性的看法。本文阐述了艾滋病毒+抑郁症研究形成阶段的一个具体目标,该研究旨在开发和评估将抑郁症管理纳入乌干达常规艾滋病毒护理的模式。
这是一项定性研究。数据通过对试点阶段入组和随访的11名患者进行深入访谈收集,以及在试点阶段结束时对11名依从性患者(完成心理治疗疗程的患者)和6名非依从性患者(至少错过两次疗程的患者)进行退出访谈收集。对四名临床医生、五名主管和一名心理健康专家进行了关键信息访谈,还与外展卫生工作者进行了三次焦点小组讨论。这些是在姆皮吉区的四个公共卫生设施中进行的有目的抽样。对数据进行了主题分析。
患者强调了在艾滋病毒护理背景下治疗抑郁症的益处,包括提高对抗逆转录病毒疗法的依从性、克服失眠和自杀念头以及重新获得自我效能感。尽管临床医生和其他利益相关者报告了治疗抑郁症的益处,但他们提到了在艾滋病毒护理中管理抑郁症的挑战,这些挑战包括组织层面(工作量增加)和患者层面(等待时间延长和对优惠待遇的看法)。利益相关者普遍就如何最好地整合达成了共识,包括对组织层面干预措施的建议——培训、预约安排的协调和结构调整——以及患者层面的干预措施,以增强对抑郁症的认识。
在关键利益相关者中,将抑郁症管理纳入乌干达常规艾滋病毒护理是可以接受的,但整合的技术和操作可行性需要在组织和患者层面进行变革。