Cargando…
The role of community health workers and local leaders in reducing attrition among participant in the AIDS indicator survey and HIV incidence in a national cohort study in Rwanda
BACKGROUND: Retention of participants in longitudinal prospective surveys can challenging for population health researchers. Community health workers (CHWs) may help reduce attrition. METHODS: We used data came from a longitudinal prospective household-based survey targeting women and men in Rwanda,...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
BioMed Central
2018
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5845190/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29523102 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-018-5243-x |
_version_ | 1783305376017416192 |
---|---|
author | Mutagoma, Mwumvaneza Sebuhoro, Dieudonné Nyemazi, Jean Pierre Mills, Edward J. Forrest, Jamie I. Remera, Eric Murindabigwi, Augustin Semakula, Mouhamed Nsanzimana, Sabin |
author_facet | Mutagoma, Mwumvaneza Sebuhoro, Dieudonné Nyemazi, Jean Pierre Mills, Edward J. Forrest, Jamie I. Remera, Eric Murindabigwi, Augustin Semakula, Mouhamed Nsanzimana, Sabin |
author_sort | Mutagoma, Mwumvaneza |
collection | PubMed |
description | BACKGROUND: Retention of participants in longitudinal prospective surveys can challenging for population health researchers. Community health workers (CHWs) may help reduce attrition. METHODS: We used data came from a longitudinal prospective household-based survey targeting women and men in Rwanda, collected between June 2013 and December 2014. The sample was drawn from a population that included all residents of all 30 districts, 416 sectors, and 14,837 villages in Rwanda. The outcome measure was time to loss-to-follow-up. Follow up visits occurred at three, six and nine, and 12 months. A Cox proportional hazards model was constructed to identify factors independently associated with time to loss-to-follow-up. RESULTS: Overall, 14,222 respondents consented to be interviewed at baseline. At the end of 12 months of follow up, 13,728 were revisited and consented to participate at 12 months of follow up. The overall attrition rate was 8.0%. A majority of those lost (54.3%) were less than 25 years of age, male (55.1%), not living in union (67.3%), had no education level or had primary education level (71.4%), or were in the highest wealth index (54.2%). Compared to illiterate, secondary education was negatively associated with attrition. CONCLUSION: The Rwanda AIDS indicator and HIV incidence survey recorded a very high retention of participants after 12 months. CHWs and local leaders played a major role to reduce attrition rate and identifying factors associated with loss-to-follow-up can help CHWs strengthen the quality of longitudinal survey data. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-5845190 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2018 |
publisher | BioMed Central |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-58451902018-03-14 The role of community health workers and local leaders in reducing attrition among participant in the AIDS indicator survey and HIV incidence in a national cohort study in Rwanda Mutagoma, Mwumvaneza Sebuhoro, Dieudonné Nyemazi, Jean Pierre Mills, Edward J. Forrest, Jamie I. Remera, Eric Murindabigwi, Augustin Semakula, Mouhamed Nsanzimana, Sabin BMC Public Health Research Article BACKGROUND: Retention of participants in longitudinal prospective surveys can challenging for population health researchers. Community health workers (CHWs) may help reduce attrition. METHODS: We used data came from a longitudinal prospective household-based survey targeting women and men in Rwanda, collected between June 2013 and December 2014. The sample was drawn from a population that included all residents of all 30 districts, 416 sectors, and 14,837 villages in Rwanda. The outcome measure was time to loss-to-follow-up. Follow up visits occurred at three, six and nine, and 12 months. A Cox proportional hazards model was constructed to identify factors independently associated with time to loss-to-follow-up. RESULTS: Overall, 14,222 respondents consented to be interviewed at baseline. At the end of 12 months of follow up, 13,728 were revisited and consented to participate at 12 months of follow up. The overall attrition rate was 8.0%. A majority of those lost (54.3%) were less than 25 years of age, male (55.1%), not living in union (67.3%), had no education level or had primary education level (71.4%), or were in the highest wealth index (54.2%). Compared to illiterate, secondary education was negatively associated with attrition. CONCLUSION: The Rwanda AIDS indicator and HIV incidence survey recorded a very high retention of participants after 12 months. CHWs and local leaders played a major role to reduce attrition rate and identifying factors associated with loss-to-follow-up can help CHWs strengthen the quality of longitudinal survey data. BioMed Central 2018-03-09 /pmc/articles/PMC5845190/ /pubmed/29523102 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-018-5243-x Text en © The Author(s). 2018 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated. |
spellingShingle | Research Article Mutagoma, Mwumvaneza Sebuhoro, Dieudonné Nyemazi, Jean Pierre Mills, Edward J. Forrest, Jamie I. Remera, Eric Murindabigwi, Augustin Semakula, Mouhamed Nsanzimana, Sabin The role of community health workers and local leaders in reducing attrition among participant in the AIDS indicator survey and HIV incidence in a national cohort study in Rwanda |
title | The role of community health workers and local leaders in reducing attrition among participant in the AIDS indicator survey and HIV incidence in a national cohort study in Rwanda |
title_full | The role of community health workers and local leaders in reducing attrition among participant in the AIDS indicator survey and HIV incidence in a national cohort study in Rwanda |
title_fullStr | The role of community health workers and local leaders in reducing attrition among participant in the AIDS indicator survey and HIV incidence in a national cohort study in Rwanda |
title_full_unstemmed | The role of community health workers and local leaders in reducing attrition among participant in the AIDS indicator survey and HIV incidence in a national cohort study in Rwanda |
title_short | The role of community health workers and local leaders in reducing attrition among participant in the AIDS indicator survey and HIV incidence in a national cohort study in Rwanda |
title_sort | role of community health workers and local leaders in reducing attrition among participant in the aids indicator survey and hiv incidence in a national cohort study in rwanda |
topic | Research Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5845190/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29523102 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-018-5243-x |
work_keys_str_mv | AT mutagomamwumvaneza theroleofcommunityhealthworkersandlocalleadersinreducingattritionamongparticipantintheaidsindicatorsurveyandhivincidenceinanationalcohortstudyinrwanda AT sebuhorodieudonne theroleofcommunityhealthworkersandlocalleadersinreducingattritionamongparticipantintheaidsindicatorsurveyandhivincidenceinanationalcohortstudyinrwanda AT nyemazijeanpierre theroleofcommunityhealthworkersandlocalleadersinreducingattritionamongparticipantintheaidsindicatorsurveyandhivincidenceinanationalcohortstudyinrwanda AT millsedwardj theroleofcommunityhealthworkersandlocalleadersinreducingattritionamongparticipantintheaidsindicatorsurveyandhivincidenceinanationalcohortstudyinrwanda AT forrestjamiei theroleofcommunityhealthworkersandlocalleadersinreducingattritionamongparticipantintheaidsindicatorsurveyandhivincidenceinanationalcohortstudyinrwanda AT remeraeric theroleofcommunityhealthworkersandlocalleadersinreducingattritionamongparticipantintheaidsindicatorsurveyandhivincidenceinanationalcohortstudyinrwanda AT murindabigwiaugustin theroleofcommunityhealthworkersandlocalleadersinreducingattritionamongparticipantintheaidsindicatorsurveyandhivincidenceinanationalcohortstudyinrwanda AT semakulamouhamed theroleofcommunityhealthworkersandlocalleadersinreducingattritionamongparticipantintheaidsindicatorsurveyandhivincidenceinanationalcohortstudyinrwanda AT nsanzimanasabin theroleofcommunityhealthworkersandlocalleadersinreducingattritionamongparticipantintheaidsindicatorsurveyandhivincidenceinanationalcohortstudyinrwanda AT mutagomamwumvaneza roleofcommunityhealthworkersandlocalleadersinreducingattritionamongparticipantintheaidsindicatorsurveyandhivincidenceinanationalcohortstudyinrwanda AT sebuhorodieudonne roleofcommunityhealthworkersandlocalleadersinreducingattritionamongparticipantintheaidsindicatorsurveyandhivincidenceinanationalcohortstudyinrwanda AT nyemazijeanpierre roleofcommunityhealthworkersandlocalleadersinreducingattritionamongparticipantintheaidsindicatorsurveyandhivincidenceinanationalcohortstudyinrwanda AT millsedwardj roleofcommunityhealthworkersandlocalleadersinreducingattritionamongparticipantintheaidsindicatorsurveyandhivincidenceinanationalcohortstudyinrwanda AT forrestjamiei roleofcommunityhealthworkersandlocalleadersinreducingattritionamongparticipantintheaidsindicatorsurveyandhivincidenceinanationalcohortstudyinrwanda AT remeraeric roleofcommunityhealthworkersandlocalleadersinreducingattritionamongparticipantintheaidsindicatorsurveyandhivincidenceinanationalcohortstudyinrwanda AT murindabigwiaugustin roleofcommunityhealthworkersandlocalleadersinreducingattritionamongparticipantintheaidsindicatorsurveyandhivincidenceinanationalcohortstudyinrwanda AT semakulamouhamed roleofcommunityhealthworkersandlocalleadersinreducingattritionamongparticipantintheaidsindicatorsurveyandhivincidenceinanationalcohortstudyinrwanda AT nsanzimanasabin roleofcommunityhealthworkersandlocalleadersinreducingattritionamongparticipantintheaidsindicatorsurveyandhivincidenceinanationalcohortstudyinrwanda |