Among people living with HIV (PLWH), adherence to
antiretroviral therapy (ART) is crucial for health, but patients face numerous
challenges achieving sustained lifetime adherence. We conducted six focus
groups with 56 PLWH regarding ART adherence barriers and collected
sociodemographics and ART histories.
Participants were recruited through
clinics and AIDS service organizations in North Carolina. Dedoose software was
used to support thematic analysis. Participants were 59% male, 77% black, aged
23–67 years, and living with HIV 4–20 years.
Discussions reflected the fluid,
complex nature of ART adherence. Maintaining adherence required participants to
indefinitely assert consistent control across multiple areas including: their
HIV disease, their own bodies, health care providers, and social systems (e.g.,
criminal justice, hospitals, drug assistance programs). Participants described
limited control over treatment options, ART's impact on their body, and
inconsistent access to ART and subsequent inability to take ART as prescribed.
When participants felt they had more decision-making power, intentionally
choosing whether and how to take ART was not exclusively a decision about best
treating HIV. Instead, through these decisions, participants tried to regain
some amount of power and control in their lives. Supportive provider
relationships assuaged these struggles, while perceived side-effects and
multiple co-morbidities further complicated adherence.
Adherence interventions
need to better convey adherence as a continuous, changing process, not a fixed
state. A perspective shift among care providers could also help address
negative consequences of the perceived power struggles and pressures that may
drive patients to exert control via intentional medication taking practices.
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By: Kathryn E. Muessig, PhD,1 Abigail T.
Panter, PhD,2 Mary S. Mouw, MD, MPH,3 Kemi
Amola, PhD,4 Kathryn E. Stein, MPH,1 Joseph
S. Murphy,4 Eric M. Maiese, PhD, MHS,5 and David
A. Wohl, MD4
1Department of Health Behavior, Gillings School
of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,
Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
2Department of Psychology, University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
3Lineberger Cancer Center, University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
4School of Medicine, University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
5Merck & Co, Inc., Kenilworth, New Jersey.
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