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Caregiver satisfaction with paediatric HIV treatment and care in Nigeria and equity implications for children living with HIV

Caregiver satisfaction has the potential to promote equity for children living with HIV, by influencing health-seeking behaviour. We measured dimensions of caregiver satisfaction with paediatric HIV treatment in Nigeria, and discuss its implications for equity by conducting facility-based exit inter...

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Autores principales: Chamla, Dick, Asadu, Chukwuemeka, Adejuyigbe, Ebun, Davies, Abiola, Ugochukwu, Ebele, Umar, Lawal, Oluwafunke, Ilesanmi, Hassan-Hanga, Fatimah, Onubogu, Chinyere, Tunde-Oremodu, Immaculata, Madubuike, Chinelo, Umeadi, Esther, Epundu, Obed, Omosun, Adenike, Anigilaje, Emmanuel, Adeyinka, Daniel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Taylor & Francis 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4991217/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27392010
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09540121.2016.1176682
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author Chamla, Dick
Asadu, Chukwuemeka
Adejuyigbe, Ebun
Davies, Abiola
Ugochukwu, Ebele
Umar, Lawal
Oluwafunke, Ilesanmi
Hassan-Hanga, Fatimah
Onubogu, Chinyere
Tunde-Oremodu, Immaculata
Madubuike, Chinelo
Umeadi, Esther
Epundu, Obed
Omosun, Adenike
Anigilaje, Emmanuel
Adeyinka, Daniel
author_facet Chamla, Dick
Asadu, Chukwuemeka
Adejuyigbe, Ebun
Davies, Abiola
Ugochukwu, Ebele
Umar, Lawal
Oluwafunke, Ilesanmi
Hassan-Hanga, Fatimah
Onubogu, Chinyere
Tunde-Oremodu, Immaculata
Madubuike, Chinelo
Umeadi, Esther
Epundu, Obed
Omosun, Adenike
Anigilaje, Emmanuel
Adeyinka, Daniel
author_sort Chamla, Dick
collection PubMed
description Caregiver satisfaction has the potential to promote equity for children living with HIV, by influencing health-seeking behaviour. We measured dimensions of caregiver satisfaction with paediatric HIV treatment in Nigeria, and discuss its implications for equity by conducting facility-based exit interviews for caregivers of children receiving antiretroviral therapy in 20 purposively selected facilities within 5 geopolitical zones. Descriptive analysis and factor analysis were performed. Due to the hierarchical nature of the data, multilevel regression modelling was performed to investigate relationships between satisfaction factors and socio-demographic variables. Of 1550 caregivers interviewed, 63% (95% CI: 60.6–65.4) reported being very satisfied overall; however, satisfaction varied in some dimensions: only 55.6% (53.1–58.1) of caregivers could talk privately with health workers, 56.9% (54.4–59.3) reported that queues to see health workers were too long, and 89.9% (88.4–91.4) said that some health workers did not treat patients living with HIV with sufficient respect. Based on factor analysis, two underlying factors, labelled Availability and Attitude, were identified. In multilevel regression, the satisfaction with availability of services correlated with formal employment status (p < .01), whereas caregivers receiving care in private facilities were less likely satisfied with both availability (p < .01) and attitude of health workers (p < .05). State and facility levels influenced attitudes of the health workers (p < .01), but not availability of services. We conclude that high levels of overall satisfaction among caregivers masked dissatisfaction with some aspects of services. The two underlying satisfaction factors are part of access typology critical for closing equity gaps in access to HIV treatment between adults and children, and across socio-economic groups.
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spelling pubmed-49912172016-09-06 Caregiver satisfaction with paediatric HIV treatment and care in Nigeria and equity implications for children living with HIV Chamla, Dick Asadu, Chukwuemeka Adejuyigbe, Ebun Davies, Abiola Ugochukwu, Ebele Umar, Lawal Oluwafunke, Ilesanmi Hassan-Hanga, Fatimah Onubogu, Chinyere Tunde-Oremodu, Immaculata Madubuike, Chinelo Umeadi, Esther Epundu, Obed Omosun, Adenike Anigilaje, Emmanuel Adeyinka, Daniel AIDS Care Articles Caregiver satisfaction has the potential to promote equity for children living with HIV, by influencing health-seeking behaviour. We measured dimensions of caregiver satisfaction with paediatric HIV treatment in Nigeria, and discuss its implications for equity by conducting facility-based exit interviews for caregivers of children receiving antiretroviral therapy in 20 purposively selected facilities within 5 geopolitical zones. Descriptive analysis and factor analysis were performed. Due to the hierarchical nature of the data, multilevel regression modelling was performed to investigate relationships between satisfaction factors and socio-demographic variables. Of 1550 caregivers interviewed, 63% (95% CI: 60.6–65.4) reported being very satisfied overall; however, satisfaction varied in some dimensions: only 55.6% (53.1–58.1) of caregivers could talk privately with health workers, 56.9% (54.4–59.3) reported that queues to see health workers were too long, and 89.9% (88.4–91.4) said that some health workers did not treat patients living with HIV with sufficient respect. Based on factor analysis, two underlying factors, labelled Availability and Attitude, were identified. In multilevel regression, the satisfaction with availability of services correlated with formal employment status (p < .01), whereas caregivers receiving care in private facilities were less likely satisfied with both availability (p < .01) and attitude of health workers (p < .05). State and facility levels influenced attitudes of the health workers (p < .01), but not availability of services. We conclude that high levels of overall satisfaction among caregivers masked dissatisfaction with some aspects of services. The two underlying satisfaction factors are part of access typology critical for closing equity gaps in access to HIV treatment between adults and children, and across socio-economic groups. Taylor & Francis 2016-05-26 2016-07-08 /pmc/articles/PMC4991217/ /pubmed/27392010 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09540121.2016.1176682 Text en © 2016 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Articles
Chamla, Dick
Asadu, Chukwuemeka
Adejuyigbe, Ebun
Davies, Abiola
Ugochukwu, Ebele
Umar, Lawal
Oluwafunke, Ilesanmi
Hassan-Hanga, Fatimah
Onubogu, Chinyere
Tunde-Oremodu, Immaculata
Madubuike, Chinelo
Umeadi, Esther
Epundu, Obed
Omosun, Adenike
Anigilaje, Emmanuel
Adeyinka, Daniel
Caregiver satisfaction with paediatric HIV treatment and care in Nigeria and equity implications for children living with HIV
title Caregiver satisfaction with paediatric HIV treatment and care in Nigeria and equity implications for children living with HIV
title_full Caregiver satisfaction with paediatric HIV treatment and care in Nigeria and equity implications for children living with HIV
title_fullStr Caregiver satisfaction with paediatric HIV treatment and care in Nigeria and equity implications for children living with HIV
title_full_unstemmed Caregiver satisfaction with paediatric HIV treatment and care in Nigeria and equity implications for children living with HIV
title_short Caregiver satisfaction with paediatric HIV treatment and care in Nigeria and equity implications for children living with HIV
title_sort caregiver satisfaction with paediatric hiv treatment and care in nigeria and equity implications for children living with hiv
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4991217/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27392010
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09540121.2016.1176682
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