了解南非艾滋病和高血压综合治疗的障碍和促进因素。

Leslie C M Johnson, Suha H Khan, Mohammed K Ali, Karla I Galaviz, Fatima Waseem, Claudia E Ordóñez, Mark J Siedner, Athini Nyatela, Vincent C Marconi, Samanta T Lalla-Edward
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:艾滋病病毒感染者的高血压负担很重,尤其是在中低收入国家,但这些国家在高血压筛查和护理方面仍存在差距。本研究旨在确定南非约翰内斯堡初级保健诊所中艾滋病病毒感染者进行高血压筛查、治疗和管理的促进因素和障碍。此外,研究还纳入了不同的利益相关群体,以确定不一致的看法:方法:采用横断面研究设计,通过与艾滋病病毒感染者、高血压患者和诊所管理人员的访谈(n = 53)以及与诊所员工的焦点小组讨论(n = 9)收集数据。在COM-B和理论领域框架的指导下,采用定性框架分析方法来识别和比较不同利益相关群体的高血压护理决定因素:来自诊所员工和管理人员的数据产生了三个主题,分别描述了采用和实施高血压筛查和治疗的促进因素和障碍:1)诊所的结构和运营能力有限,无法支持综合护理模式的实施;2)慢性病护理指南的教育和培训不一致,各诊所之间往往缺乏这方面的教育和培训;3)临床医生的目标是在诊所内加强慢性病护理,但首先需要宣传医疗系统的特点,以可持续地支持综合护理。患者数据产生了三个主题,分别描述了就诊和慢性病自我管理的现有促进因素和障碍:1)与高血压相关的发病率和死亡率的威胁是改变生活方式的动力;2)诊所的后勤、人员和资源挑战造成的情感伤害;3)高血压自我管理是信息和支持来源的拼凑。高血压筛查、治疗和管理的主要障碍与环境资源和背景(即缺乏有利资源和诊所运作的孤立流程)以及患者的知识和情绪(即缺乏对高血压风险的认识、恐惧和沮丧)有关。临床参与者和患者对优先考虑艾滋病护理和高血压护理的需求存在差异:多方利益相关者的数据汇聚在一起,凸显了需要改进的关键领域,针对诊所工作人员的动机和患者的能力而量身定制的实施策略可以解决各群体在高血压筛查、治疗和管理方面所面临的挑战。
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Understanding barriers and facilitators to integrated HIV and hypertension care in South Africa.

Background: The burden of hypertension among people with HIV is high, particularly in low-and middle-income countries, yet gaps in hypertension screening and care in these settings persist. This study aimed to identify facilitators of and barriers to hypertension screening, treatment, and management among people with HIV in primary care clinics in Johannesburg, South Africa. Additionally, different stakeholder groups were included to identify discordant perceptions.

Methods: Using a cross-sectional study design, data were collected via interviews (n = 53) with people with HIV and hypertension and clinic managers and focus group discussions (n = 9) with clinic staff. A qualitative framework analysis approach guided by COM-B and the Theoretical Domains Framework were used to identify and compare determinants of hypertension care across stakeholder groups.

Results: Data from clinic staff and managers generated three themes characterizing facilitators of and barriers to the adoption and implementation of hypertension screening and treatment: 1) clinics have limited structural and operational capacity to support the implementation of integrated care models, 2) education and training on chronic care guidelines is inconsistent and often lacking across clinics, and 3) clinicians have the goal of enhancing chronic care within their clinics but first need to advocate for health system characteristics that will sustainably support integrated care. Patient data generated three themes characterizing existing facilitators of and barriers to clinic attendance and chronic disease self-management: 1) the threat of hypertension-related morbidity and mortality as a motivator for lifestyle change, 2) the emotional toll of clinic's logistical, staff, and resource challenges, and 3) hypertension self-management as a patchwork of informational and support sources. The main barriers to hypertension screening, treatment, and management were related to environmental resources and context (i.e., lack of enabling resources and siloed flow of clinic operations) and patients' knowledge and emotions (i.e., lack of awareness about hypertension risk, fear, and frustration). Clinical actors and patients differed in perceived need to prioritize HIV versus hypertension care.

Conclusions: The convergence of multi-stakeholder data highlight key areas for improvement, where tailored implementation strategies targeting motivations of clinic staff and capacity of patients may address challenges to hypertension screening, treatment, and management recognized across groups.

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