Wednesday, February 3, 2016

Generating Trust: Programmatic Strategies to Reach Women Who Inject Drugs with Harm Reduction Services in Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania

Highlights
  • We examine causes for disparity in outreach and enrollment among men and women IDU.
  • We present interview data from patients and providers at the first methadone clinic in Tanzania.
  • Current outreach strategies focus on public areas where men IDU congregate during the day.
  • Changing outreach locations and times will increase access to women IDU.
  • Including more women outreach workers will help connect women to treatment. 
Abstract
Background
Strong evidence supports the effectiveness of methadone-assisted therapy (MAT) to treat opioid dependence, reduce the risk of HIV transmission, and improve HIV related health outcomes among people who inject drugs (PWID). HIV prevalence reaches 71% in women who inject drugs (WWID) in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania; creating an urgent need for access to MAT. Despite the availability and potential benefits of treatment, few women have enrolled in services. This formative research sought to identify programmatic strategies to increase women's participation in outreach and their subsequent enrollment in MAT.

Methods
We conducted twenty-five, in-depth interviews with patients and their providers at a MAT clinic. Open-ended interviews explored enrollment experiences, with a focus on contextual barriers and facilitators unique to women. Ethnographic observations of harm reduction education at outreach sites and the MAT clinic enriched interview data. Trust/mistrust emerged as an overarching theme cross cutting patient and provider accounts of the connective process to enroll PWID in the methadone program. We explore trust and mistrustin relationship to the interrelated themes of family loss, social isolation, vehement discrimination and motivation for treatment.

Results
Narratives delineated both the generation of mistrust against PWID and the generation of mistrust in PWID against outsiders and medical institutions. In order to enroll PWID in treatment, community base organizations engaged outreach strategies to overcome mistrust and connect eligible patients to care, which varied in their success at recruiting women and men. Greater discrimination against WWID pushed them into hiding, away from outreach teams that focus on outdoor areas where men who inject drugs congregate. Building trust through multiple encounters and making a personal connection facilitated entry into care for women. Only PWID were eligible for MAT, due to resource constraints and the higher risk associated with injection drug use. Many women smoke heroin, yet still face high risk of HIV, resulting from low condom use during sex work to fund drug use.

Conclusion
Expanding outreach times and locations, by women peers, could increase women's enrollment in treatment. Allowing women who smoke heroin to enter the program could prevent onward transmission via sex work and reduce the chance of progressing from the lower risk smoking or sniffing to injection drug use.

Purchase full article at:   http://goo.gl/otTNSc

By:  Sophia Zamudio-Haas, Bathsheba Mahenge, Haneefa Saleem, Jessie Mbwambo, Barrot H. Lambdin
Affiliations
Sophia Zamudio-Haas, Department of Preventative Medicine University of California, San Francisco 550 16th Street San Francisco, California 94143
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics University of California San Francisco, CA
Department of Global Health University of Washington Seattle, WA





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