Supporting medication
adherence is a priority in HIV care worldwide as low adherence threatens the
effectiveness of antiretroviral treatment (ART). While evidence on adherence
causes and consequences has steadily accumulated, investigating current
practice and relevant determinants of practitioners’ behaviors has only
recently been highlighted as essential for developing effective and sustainable
interventions.
In Romania, ART adherence is low despite universal access to HIV
care, and improving support services is a priority. We report a qualitative
exploration of practitioners’ experiences and views on ART adherence support,
guided by current behavioral theory. Semi-structured interviews were performed
with 10 practitioners from six HIV centers, aiming for maximum variation
sampling on professional experience, location, and organization type. Questions
addressed practitioners’ views and experiences on assessing patients’ adherence
behaviors and determinants, content and format of adherence support, and
perceived influences on their capacity to deliver support. Verbatim transcripts
were analyzed via template analysis.
Results show that adherence support is
provided in Romania by trained psychologists in multidisciplinary teams that
operate flexibly and perform multiple HIV care activities. Assessment of
adherence behaviors and determinants is primarily interview-based, and
practitioners use mostly psychotherapeutic techniques and theories with a
degree of intervention tailoring.
Practitioners’ descriptions covered a broad
range of common determinants and behavior change techniques, but showed limited
use of behavioral theory. Participants also described difficulties to cope with
limited resources, and lack of support for managing practical and emotional
challenges. Several opportunities for improvement were identified, such as
standardizing patient profiling and intervention delivery, conceptualizing and
recording active intervention content based on behavioral theory, and actively
monitoring intervention effectiveness.
This qualitative inquiry provided
valuable information for improving adherence support in this clinical context.
Understanding practitioners’ perspectives based on behavioral theory-informed
analyses can help intervention developers increase intervention fidelity by
integrating current practice information in program design.
Purchase full article at: http://goo.gl/nir0uC
By: a*, a & b
a Amsterdam
School of Communication Research ASCoR, Communication Science, University of
Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands
b Baylor Black
Sea Foundation at the Centrul Clinic de Excelență–Spitalul Clinic de Boli
Infec–ioase Constanţa– Baylor College of Medicine – Texas Children's Hospital –
Abbott Fund, Constanța, Romania
More at: https://twitter.com/hiv
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