Chipungu Jenala, Smith Helene, Mwamba Chanda, Haambokoma Mwiza, Sharma Anjali, Savory Theodora, Musheke Maurice, Pry Jake, Bolton Carolyn, Sikazwe Izukanji, Herce Michael E
Research Department, Social and Behavioral Science Unit, Centre for Infectious Disease Research in Zambia (CIDRZ), Lusaka, Zambia.
PLOS Glob Public Health. 2024 May 23;4(5):e0003094. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0003094. eCollection 2024.
Multiple steps from HIV diagnosis to treatment initiation and confirmed engagement with the health system are required for people living with HIV to establish full linkage to care in the modern treat all era. We undertook a qualitative study to gain an in-depth understanding of the impeding and enabling factors at each step of this linkage pathway. In-depth interviews were conducted with fifty-eight people living with HIV recruited from ten routine HIV care settings supported by the U.S. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) in Lusaka, Zambia. Using a semi-structured interview guide informed by an established conceptual framework for linkage to care, questions explored the reasons behind late, missed, and early linkage into HIV treatment, as well as factors influencing the decision to silently transfer to a different clinic after an HIV diagnosis. We identified previously established and intersecting barriers of internal and external HIV-related stigma, concerns about ART side effects, substance use, uncertainties for the future, and a perceived lack of partner and social support that impeded linkage to care at every step of the linkage pathway. However, we also uncovered newer themes specific to the current test and treat era related to the rapidity of ART initiation and insufficient patient-centered post-test counseling that appeared to exacerbate these well-known barriers, including callous health workers and limited time to process a new HIV diagnosis before treatment. Long travel distance to the clinic where they were diagnosed was the most common reason for silently transferring to another clinic for treatment. On the other hand, individual resilience, quality counseling, patient-centered health workers, and a supportive and empathetic social network mitigated these barriers. These findings highlight potential areas for strengthening linkage to care and addressing early treatment interruption and silent transfer in the test and treat era in Zambia.
在现代“全面治疗”时代,艾滋病毒感染者要实现与医疗服务的完全衔接,需经历从艾滋病毒诊断到开始治疗以及确认与卫生系统建立联系的多个步骤。我们开展了一项定性研究,以深入了解这一衔接路径各步骤中的阻碍因素和促进因素。对从赞比亚卢萨卡由美国总统艾滋病紧急救援计划(PEPFAR)支持的10个常规艾滋病毒护理机构招募的58名艾滋病毒感染者进行了深入访谈。使用基于已确立的护理衔接概念框架的半结构化访谈指南,问题探讨了延迟、错过和过早衔接艾滋病毒治疗背后的原因,以及影响艾滋病毒诊断后悄悄转至不同诊所这一决定的因素。我们确定了先前已存在且相互交叉的内部和外部与艾滋病毒相关的耻辱感、对抗逆转录病毒疗法副作用的担忧、药物使用、对未来的不确定性以及伴侣和社会支持的缺失等障碍,这些障碍在衔接路径的每个步骤都阻碍了与护理的衔接。然而,我们也发现了当前检测与治疗时代特有的新主题,这些主题与抗逆转录病毒疗法启动的快速性以及以患者为中心的检测后咨询不足有关,这似乎加剧了这些众所周知的障碍,包括冷漠的医护人员以及在开始治疗前处理新的艾滋病毒诊断的时间有限。前往其被诊断诊所的路途遥远是悄悄转至另一家诊所接受治疗的最常见原因。另一方面,个人的适应能力、高质量的咨询、以患者为中心的医护人员以及支持性和富有同理心的社会网络减轻了这些障碍。这些发现突出了在赞比亚检测与治疗时代加强与护理衔接以及解决早期治疗中断和悄悄转院问题的潜在领域。