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A group randomized trial using an appointment system to improve adherence to ART at reproductive and child health clinics implementing Option B+ in Tanzania

INTRODUCTION: In October 2013, Tanzania adopted Option B+ under which HIV-positive pregnant women are initiated on antiretroviral therapy in reproductive and child health clinics at diagnosis. Studies have shown that adherence and retention to antiretroviral treatment can be problematic. METHODS: We...

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Autores principales: Ross-Degnan, Dennis, Chalker, John, Liana, Jafary, Kajoka, Mwikemo Deborah, Valimba, Richard, Kimatta, Suleiman, Dillip, Angel, Vialle-Valentin, Catherine, Embrey, Martha, Lieber, Rachel, Johnson, Keith
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5619716/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28957381
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0184591
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author Ross-Degnan, Dennis
Chalker, John
Liana, Jafary
Kajoka, Mwikemo Deborah
Valimba, Richard
Kimatta, Suleiman
Dillip, Angel
Vialle-Valentin, Catherine
Embrey, Martha
Lieber, Rachel
Johnson, Keith
author_facet Ross-Degnan, Dennis
Chalker, John
Liana, Jafary
Kajoka, Mwikemo Deborah
Valimba, Richard
Kimatta, Suleiman
Dillip, Angel
Vialle-Valentin, Catherine
Embrey, Martha
Lieber, Rachel
Johnson, Keith
author_sort Ross-Degnan, Dennis
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: In October 2013, Tanzania adopted Option B+ under which HIV-positive pregnant women are initiated on antiretroviral therapy in reproductive and child health clinics at diagnosis. Studies have shown that adherence and retention to antiretroviral treatment can be problematic. METHODS: We implemented a group randomized controlled trial in 24 reproductive and child health clinics in eight districts in Mbeya region. The trial tested the impact of implementing paper-based appointment tracking and community outreach systems on the rate of missed appointments and number of days covered by dispensed antiretroviral medications among women previously established on antiretroviral therapy. We used interrupted time series analysis to assess study outcomes. Clinic staff and patients in intervention clinics were aware of the intervention because of change in clinic procedures; data collectors knew the study group assignment. RESULTS: Three months pre-intervention, we identified 1924 and 1226 patients established on antiretroviral therapy for six months or more in intervention and control clinics, respectively, of whom 83.4% and 86.9% had one or more post-intervention visits. The unadjusted rate of missed visits declined from 36.5% to 34.4% in intervention clinics and increased from 38.9% to 45.5% in control clinics following the intervention. Interrupted time series analyses demonstrated a net decrease of 13.7% (95% CI [-15.4,-12.1]) for missed visits at six months post-intervention. Similar differential changes were observed for visits missed by 3, 7, 15, or 60 days. CONCLUSION: Appointment-tracking and community outreach significantly improved appointment-keeping for women on antiretroviral therapy. The facility staff controlled their workload better, identified missing patients rapidly, and worked with existing community organizations. There is now enough evidence to scale up this approach to all antiretroviral therapy and Option B+ reproductive and child health clinics in Tanzania as well as to evaluate the intervention in medical clinics that treat other chronic health conditions. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Registry for International Development Impact Evaluations ID-55310280d8757
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spelling pubmed-56197162017-10-17 A group randomized trial using an appointment system to improve adherence to ART at reproductive and child health clinics implementing Option B+ in Tanzania Ross-Degnan, Dennis Chalker, John Liana, Jafary Kajoka, Mwikemo Deborah Valimba, Richard Kimatta, Suleiman Dillip, Angel Vialle-Valentin, Catherine Embrey, Martha Lieber, Rachel Johnson, Keith PLoS One Research Article INTRODUCTION: In October 2013, Tanzania adopted Option B+ under which HIV-positive pregnant women are initiated on antiretroviral therapy in reproductive and child health clinics at diagnosis. Studies have shown that adherence and retention to antiretroviral treatment can be problematic. METHODS: We implemented a group randomized controlled trial in 24 reproductive and child health clinics in eight districts in Mbeya region. The trial tested the impact of implementing paper-based appointment tracking and community outreach systems on the rate of missed appointments and number of days covered by dispensed antiretroviral medications among women previously established on antiretroviral therapy. We used interrupted time series analysis to assess study outcomes. Clinic staff and patients in intervention clinics were aware of the intervention because of change in clinic procedures; data collectors knew the study group assignment. RESULTS: Three months pre-intervention, we identified 1924 and 1226 patients established on antiretroviral therapy for six months or more in intervention and control clinics, respectively, of whom 83.4% and 86.9% had one or more post-intervention visits. The unadjusted rate of missed visits declined from 36.5% to 34.4% in intervention clinics and increased from 38.9% to 45.5% in control clinics following the intervention. Interrupted time series analyses demonstrated a net decrease of 13.7% (95% CI [-15.4,-12.1]) for missed visits at six months post-intervention. Similar differential changes were observed for visits missed by 3, 7, 15, or 60 days. CONCLUSION: Appointment-tracking and community outreach significantly improved appointment-keeping for women on antiretroviral therapy. The facility staff controlled their workload better, identified missing patients rapidly, and worked with existing community organizations. There is now enough evidence to scale up this approach to all antiretroviral therapy and Option B+ reproductive and child health clinics in Tanzania as well as to evaluate the intervention in medical clinics that treat other chronic health conditions. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Registry for International Development Impact Evaluations ID-55310280d8757 Public Library of Science 2017-09-28 /pmc/articles/PMC5619716/ /pubmed/28957381 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0184591 Text en © 2017 Ross-Degnan et al 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 author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ross-Degnan, Dennis
Chalker, John
Liana, Jafary
Kajoka, Mwikemo Deborah
Valimba, Richard
Kimatta, Suleiman
Dillip, Angel
Vialle-Valentin, Catherine
Embrey, Martha
Lieber, Rachel
Johnson, Keith
A group randomized trial using an appointment system to improve adherence to ART at reproductive and child health clinics implementing Option B+ in Tanzania
title A group randomized trial using an appointment system to improve adherence to ART at reproductive and child health clinics implementing Option B+ in Tanzania
title_full A group randomized trial using an appointment system to improve adherence to ART at reproductive and child health clinics implementing Option B+ in Tanzania
title_fullStr A group randomized trial using an appointment system to improve adherence to ART at reproductive and child health clinics implementing Option B+ in Tanzania
title_full_unstemmed A group randomized trial using an appointment system to improve adherence to ART at reproductive and child health clinics implementing Option B+ in Tanzania
title_short A group randomized trial using an appointment system to improve adherence to ART at reproductive and child health clinics implementing Option B+ in Tanzania
title_sort group randomized trial using an appointment system to improve adherence to art at reproductive and child health clinics implementing option b+ in tanzania
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5619716/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28957381
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0184591
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