Department of Global Health, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Centre, Vaccine and Infectious Disease & Public Health Science Divisions, Seattle, Washington, USA.
J Int AIDS Soc. 2023 Apr;26(4):e26083. doi: 10.1002/jia2.26083.
Since 2018, Youth Health Africa (YHA) has placed unemployed young adults at health facilities across South Africa in 1-year non-clinical internships to support HIV services. While YHA is primarily designed to improve employment prospects for youth, it also strives to strengthen the health system. Hundreds of YHA interns have been placed in programme (e.g. HIV testing and counselling) or administrative (e.g. data and filing) roles, but their impact on HIV service delivery has not been evaluated.
Using routinely collected data from October 2017 to March 2020, we conducted an interrupted time-series analysis to explore the impact of YHA on HIV testing, treatment initiation and retention in care. We analysed data from facilities in Gauteng and North West where interns were placed between November 2018 and October 2019. We used linear regression, accounting for facility-level clustering and time correlation, to compare trends before and after interns were placed for seven HIV service indicators covering HIV testing, treatment initiation and retention in care. Outcomes were measured monthly at each facility. Time was measured as months since the first interns were placed at each facility. We conducted three secondary analyses per indicator, stratified by intern role, number of interns and region.
Based on 207 facilities hosting 604 interns, YHA interns at facilities were associated with significant improvements in monthly trends for numbers of people tested for HIV, newly initiated on treatment and retained in care (i.e. loss to follow-up, tested for viral load [VL] and virally suppressed). We found no difference in trends for the number of people newly diagnosed with HIV or the number initiating treatment within 14 days of diagnosis. Changes in HIV testing, overall treatment initiation and VL testing/suppression were most pronounced where there were programme interns and a higher number of interns; change in loss to follow-up was greatest where there were administrative interns.
Placing interns in facilities to support non-clinical tasks may improve HIV service delivery by contributing to improved HIV testing, treatment initiation and retention in care. Using youth interns as lay health workers may be an impactful strategy to strengthen the HIV response while supporting youth employment.
自 2018 年以来,非洲青年健康组织(YHA)已将失业的年轻成年人安置在南非各地的卫生机构中,让他们参加为期 1 年的非临床实习,以支持艾滋病毒服务。虽然 YHA 的主要目的是改善青年的就业前景,但它也努力加强卫生系统。数以百计的 YHA 实习生被安排在方案(例如艾滋病毒检测和咨询)或行政(例如数据和归档)角色中,但他们对艾滋病毒服务提供的影响尚未得到评估。
使用 2017 年 10 月至 2020 年 3 月期间收集的常规数据,我们进行了一项中断时间序列分析,以探讨 YHA 对艾滋病毒检测、治疗启动和护理保留的影响。我们分析了在 2018 年 11 月至 2019 年 10 月期间实习生被安置在豪登省和西北省的设施的数据。我们使用线性回归,考虑到设施层面的聚类和时间相关性,比较了在每个设施安置实习生前后七个艾滋病毒服务指标的趋势,这些指标涵盖艾滋病毒检测、治疗启动和护理保留。每个设施每月测量一次结果。时间以每个设施安置第一批实习生后的月数来衡量。我们对每个指标进行了三次二次分析,按实习角色、实习生人数和区域进行分层。
根据 207 个收容 604 名实习生的设施,设施中的 YHA 实习生与每月艾滋病毒检测人数、新开始治疗和护理保留(即失访、检测病毒载量[VL]和病毒抑制)的趋势显著改善相关。我们没有发现新诊断出艾滋病毒的人数或在诊断后 14 天内开始治疗的人数的趋势有差异。在有方案实习生和更多实习生的情况下,艾滋病毒检测、整体治疗启动和 VL 检测/抑制的变化最为明显;在有行政实习生的情况下,失访的变化最大。
在设施中安置实习生以支持非临床任务,可能通过促进艾滋病毒检测、治疗启动和护理保留,改善艾滋病毒服务提供。利用青年实习生作为非专业卫生工作者可能是加强艾滋病毒应对并支持青年就业的一项有影响力的战略。