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Published in: Journal of the International AIDS Society 1/2009

Open Access 01-12-2009 | Research

A model for extending antiretroviral care beyond the rural health centre

Authors: Kara K Wools-Kaloustian, John E Sidle, Henry M Selke, Rajesh Vedanthan, Emmanuel K Kemboi, Lillian J Boit, Viola T Jebet, Aaron E Carroll, William M Tierney, Sylvester Kimaiyo

Published in: Journal of the International AIDS Society | Issue 1/2009

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Abstract

Background

A major obstacle facing many lower-income countries in establishing and maintaining HIV treatment programmes is the scarcity of trained health care providers. To address this shortage, the World Health Organization has recommend task shifting to HIV-infected peers.

Methods

We designed a model of HIV care that utilizes HIV-infected patients, community care coordinators (CCCs), to care for their clinically stable peers with the assistance of preprogrammed personal digital assistants (PDAs). Rather than presenting for the standard of care, monthly clinic visits, in this model, patients were seen every three months in clinics and monthly by their CCCs in the community during the interim two months. This study was conducted in Kosirai Division, western Kenya, where eight of the 24 sub-locations (defined geographic areas) within the division were randomly assigned to the intervention with the remainder used as controls.
Prior to entering the field, CCCs underwent intensive didactic training and mentoring related to the assessment and support of HIV patients, as well as the use of PDAs. PDAs were programmed with specific questions and to issue alerts if responses fell outside of pre-established parameters. CCCs were regularly evaluated in six performance areas. An impressionistic analysis on the transcripts from the monthly group meetings that formed the basis of the continuous feedback and quality improvement programme was used to assess this model.

Results

All eight of the assigned CCCs successfully passed their training and mentoring, entered the field and remained active for the two years of the study. On evaluation of the CCCs, 89% of their summary scores were documented as superior during Year 1 and 94% as superior during Year 2. Six themes emerged from the impressionistic analysis in Year 1: confidentiality and "community" disclosure; roles and responsibilities; logistics; clinical care partnership; antiretroviral adherence; and PDA issues. At the end of the trial, of those patients not lost to follow up, 64% (56 of 87) in the intervention and 52% (58 of 103) in the control group were willing to continue in the programme (p = 0.26).

Conclusion

We found that an antiretroviral treatment delivery model that shifted patient monitoring and antiretroviral dispensing tasks into the community by HIV-infected patients was both acceptable and feasible.

Trial registration

ClinicalTrials.gov ID NCT00371540
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Metadata
Title
A model for extending antiretroviral care beyond the rural health centre
Authors
Kara K Wools-Kaloustian
John E Sidle
Henry M Selke
Rajesh Vedanthan
Emmanuel K Kemboi
Lillian J Boit
Viola T Jebet
Aaron E Carroll
William M Tierney
Sylvester Kimaiyo
Publication date
01-12-2009
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Journal of the International AIDS Society / Issue 1/2009
Electronic ISSN: 1758-2652
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1758-2652-12-22

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