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Measuring Adherence to Antiretroviral Treatment in Resource-poor Settings: The Clinical Validity of Key Indicators

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2010

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BioMed Central
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Ross-Degnan, Dennis, Marsha Pierre-Jacques, Fang Zhang, Hailu Tadeg, Lillian Gitau, Joseph Ntaganira, Robert Balikuddembe, John Chalker, Anita K. Wagner, and INRUD IAA. 2010. Measuring adherence to antiretroviral treatment in resource-poor settings: The clinical validity of key indicators. BMC Health Services Research 10: 42.

Abstract

Background: Access to antiretroviral therapy has dramatically expanded in Africa in recent years, but there are no validated approaches to measure treatment adherence in these settings. Methods: In 16 health facilities, we observed a retrospective cohort of patients initiating antiretroviral therapy. We constructed eight indicators of adherence and visit attendance during the first 18 months of treatment from data in clinic and pharmacy records and attendance logs. We measured the correlation among these measures and assessed how well each predicted changes in weight and CD4 count. Results: We followed 488 patients; 63.5% had 100% coverage of medicines during follow-up; 2.7% experienced a 30-day gap in treatment; 72.6% self-reported perfect adherence in all clinic visits; and 19.9% missed multiple clinic visits. After six months of treatment, mean weight gain was 3.9 kg and mean increase in CD4 count was 138.1 cells/mm3. Dispensing-based adherence, self-reported adherence, and consistent visit attendance were highly correlated. The first two types of adherence measure predicted gains in weight and CD4 count; consistent visit attendance was associated only with weight gain. Conclusions: This study demonstrates that routine data in African health facilities can be used to monitor antiretroviral adherence at the patient and system level.

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Measuring Adherence to Antiretroviral Treatment in… : DASH Story 2013-02-20
I am a researcher in Public Health in eShowe, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa, working at eShowe Hospital - a rural government hospital at the heart of the HIV epidemic in South Africa. I am working on a research project into adherence to ARVs. Adherence rates are dangerously low at the hospital. Out of 9000 patients, there is a possible 60% attrition rate, viral loads amongst the same proportion of patients are over 1000 copies/ml and staff are demoralised and directionlesss. We are trying to find a way forward. The research is aimed at getting behind the reasons people are defaulting on treatment and then building a strong net of support around them that is based on real life situations to help them adhere. Your access to information is key for setting the parameters for our research here. With free access we are able to use it - all those articles that are accessible only through payment are beyond the purse of a small rural hospital such as ours. We are indeed very grateful and WISH that more agencies would allow us such access.