A Socio-Ecological Examination of Treatment Access, Uptake and Adherence Issues Encountered By HIV-Positive Women in Rural North-Central Nigeria.

Llewellyn J Cornelius, Salome C Erekaha, Joshua N Okundaye, Nadia A Sam-Agudu
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引用次数: 16

Abstract

Background: In spite of the global decline in HIV infections, sub-Saharan Africa still accounts for a non-proportional majority of global new infections. While many studies have documented the importance of facilitating access to anti-retroviral therapy (ART) as a means of reducing infections, the relationship between interpersonal, community, healthcare facility, and policy-level factors and treatment adherence in Africa have not been well-described. The authors examined these factors in the context of prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT) of HIV in rural north-central Nigeria, where HIV burden is high and service coverage is low.

Methods: Eleven focus groups (n = 105) were conducted among PMTCT clients, male partners, young women, and other community members from 39 rural and semi-rural communities to explore factors related to HIV and antenatal care service use. Data were analyzed using the Constant Comparative Method.

Results: Irrespective of HIV status, participants reported barriers to access including long clinic wait times, transportation availability and cost, and the lack of HIV treatment medications. For HIV-positive women, stigma from family members, providers, and the local community affected their ability to obtain care and remain ART-adherent. In the face of these barriers, these women reflected on the importance of peer and community support, as well as the passage of laws to combat barriers to treatment access, uptake, and adherence.

Conclusions: Facilitating treatment adherence may require not only focusing on the medical treatment needs of these women but also structural issues, such as the availability of providers and drugs, and systemic stigmatization of HIV-positive patients.

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尼日利亚中北部农村艾滋病毒阳性妇女所遇到的治疗获取、吸收和坚持问题的社会生态学检查。
背景:尽管全球艾滋病毒感染率下降,但撒哈拉以南非洲仍然占全球新感染病例的非比例多数。虽然许多研究证明了促进获得抗逆转录病毒治疗作为减少感染的一种手段的重要性,但在非洲,人际、社区、卫生保健设施和政策层面因素与治疗依从性之间的关系尚未得到很好的描述。这组作者在尼日利亚中北部农村预防艾滋病毒母婴传播(PMTCT)的背景下研究了这些因素,那里的艾滋病毒负担高,服务覆盖率低。方法:对来自39个农村和半农村社区的预防母婴传播患者、男性伴侣、年轻女性和其他社区成员进行11个焦点小组(n = 105),探讨HIV和产前保健服务使用的相关因素。数据分析采用恒定比较法。结果:无论艾滋病毒状况如何,参与者都报告了获得治疗的障碍,包括诊所等待时间长,交通可用性和成本,以及缺乏艾滋病毒治疗药物。对于艾滋病毒阳性妇女,来自家庭成员、提供者和当地社区的耻辱影响了她们获得护理和坚持抗逆转录病毒治疗的能力。面对这些障碍,这些妇女思考了同伴和社区支持的重要性,以及通过法律消除获得、接受和坚持治疗方面的障碍。结论:促进治疗依从性可能不仅需要关注这些妇女的医疗需求,还需要关注结构性问题,如提供者和药物的可用性,以及对艾滋病毒阳性患者的系统性污名化。
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