BackgroundTo design effective, tailored interventions to support antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence, a thorough understanding of the barriers and facilitators of ART adherence is required. Factors at the individual and interpersonal level, ART treatment characteristics and health care factors have been proposed as important adherence determinants.MethodsTo identify the most relevant determinants of adherence in northern Tanzania, in-depth interviews were carried out with 61 treatment-experienced patients from four different clinics. The interviews were ad-verbatim transcribed and recurrent themes were coded.ResultsCoding results showed that the majority of patients had basic understanding of adherence, but also revealed misconceptions about taking medication after alcohol use. Adherence motivating beliefs were the perception of improved health and the desire to live like others, as well as the desire to be a good parent. A de-motivating belief was that stopping ART after being prayed for was an act of faith. Facilitators of adherence were support from friends and family, and assistance of home based care (HBC) providers. Important barriers to ART adherence were the use of alcohol, unavailability of food, stigma and disclosure concerns, and the clinics dispensing too few pills. Strategies recommended by the patients to improve adherence included better Care and Treatment Centre (CTC) services, recruitment of patients to become Home Based Care ( HBC) providers, and addressing the problem of stigma through education.ConclusionThis study underscores the importance of designing tailored, patient-centered adherence interventions to address challenges at the patient, family, community and health care level.
Determinants of antiretroviral therapy adherence in northern Tanzania: a comprehensive picture from the patient perspective
R. Lyimo,M. de Bruin,J. Van den Boogaard,H. Hospers,A. J. van der Ven,D. Mushi
Published 2012 in BMC Public Health
ABSTRACT
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- Publication year
2012
- Venue
BMC Public Health
- Publication date
2012-08-30
- Fields of study
Medicine
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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