Division of Infectious Diseases, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Partners in Hope, Lilongwe, Malawi.
J Int AIDS Soc. 2023 Mar;26(3):e26066. doi: 10.1002/jia2.26066.
Mobility is associated with worse outcomes across the HIV treatment cascade, especially among men. However, little is known about the mechanisms that link mobility and poor HIV outcomes and what types of mobility most increase the risk of treatment interruption among men in southern Africa.
From August 2021 to January 2022, we conducted a mixed-methods study with men living with HIV (MLHIV) but not currently receiving antiretroviral therapy (ART) in Malawi. Data collection was embedded within two larger trials (ENGAGE and IDEaL trials). We analysed baseline survey data of 223 men enrolled in the trials who reported being mobile (defined as spending ≥14 nights away from home in the past 12 months) using descriptive statistics and negative binomial regressions. We then recruited 32 men for in-depth interviews regarding their travel experiences and ART utilization. We analysed qualitative data using constant comparative methods.
Survey data showed that 34% of men with treatment interruptions were mobile, with a median of 60 nights away from home in the past 12 months; 69% of trips were for income generation. More nights away from home in the past 12 months and having fewer household assets were associated with longer periods out of care. In interviews, men reported that travel was often unplanned, and men were highly vulnerable to exploitive employer demands, which led to missed appointments and ART interruption. Men made major efforts to stay in care but were often unable to access care on short notice, were denied ART refills at non-home facilities and/or were treated poorly by providers, creating substantial barriers to remaining in and returning to care. Men desired additional multi-month dispensing (MMD), the ability to refill treatment at any facility in Malawi, and streamlined pre-travel refills at home facilities.
Men prioritize ART and struggle with the trade-offs between their own health and providing for their families. Mobility is an essential livelihood strategy for MLHIV in Malawi, but it creates conflict with ART retention, largely due to inflexible health systems. Targeted counselling and peer support, access to ART services anywhere in the country, and MMD may improve outcomes for mobile men.
在整个 HIV 治疗过程中,流动性与较差的结果相关,尤其是在男性中。然而,人们对流动性和 HIV 不良结果之间的联系机制知之甚少,也不知道在南部非洲,哪种类型的流动性会增加男性中断治疗的风险。
2021 年 8 月至 2022 年 1 月,我们在马拉维对未接受抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)的 HIV 感染者(MLHIV)男性进行了一项混合方法研究。数据收集嵌入在两项更大的试验(ENGAGE 和 IDEaL 试验)中。我们对参与试验的 223 名报告过去 12 个月中至少有 14 晚不在家的流动男性的基线调查数据进行了描述性统计和负二项回归分析。然后,我们招募了 32 名男性进行深入访谈,了解他们的旅行经历和 ART 使用情况。我们使用恒定性比较方法对定性数据进行了分析。
调查数据显示,34%的中断治疗的男性是流动的,过去 12 个月中平均离家 60 晚;69%的旅行是为了创收。过去 12 个月离家时间越长,家庭资产越少,与离开护理的时间越长相关。在访谈中,男性报告说旅行常常是计划外的,男性很容易受到剥削性雇主的需求,这导致他们错过预约和中断 ART。男性努力留在治疗中,但往往无法在短时间内获得治疗,在非家庭机构无法获得 ART 续药,或被提供者恶劣对待,这给他们继续留在和返回治疗带来了巨大障碍。男性希望获得额外的多剂量配给(MMD),能够在马拉维的任何机构续药,以及简化家庭机构的旅行前续药。
男性重视 ART,并在自身健康和养家糊口之间进行权衡。流动性是马拉维 MLHIV 的一项重要生计策略,但由于僵化的卫生系统,这与 ART 保留相冲突。有针对性的咨询和同伴支持、在全国任何地方获得 ART 服务以及 MMD 可能会改善流动男性的结果。