Evaluating a multi-component, community-based program to improve adherence and retention in care among adolescents living with HIV in Zimbabwe: study protocol for a cluster randomized controlled trial.
Webster Mavhu,Nicola Willis,Juliet Mufuka,Collin Mangenah,Kudzanayi Mvududu,Sarah Bernays,Walter Mangezi,Tsitsi Apollo,Ricardo Araya,Helen A. Weiss,Frances M. Cowan +10 more
TL;DR: This study provides a unique opportunity to generate evidence of the impact of the on-going Zvandiri program, for adolescents living with HIV, on virological failure and psychosocial outcomes as delivered in a real-world setting.
read more
Abstract: World Health Organization (WHO) adolescent HIV-testing and treatment guidelines recommend community-based interventions to support antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence and retention in care, while acknowledging that the evidence to support this recommendation is weak. This cluster randomized controlled trial aims to evaluate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a psychosocial, community-based intervention on HIV-related and psychosocial outcomes. We are conducting the trial in two districts. Sixteen clinics were randomized to either enhanced ART-adherence support or standard of care. Eligible individuals (HIV-positive adolescents aged 13–19 years and eligible for ART) in both arms receive ART and adherence support provided by adult counselors and nursing staff. Adolescents in the intervention arm additionally attend a monthly support group, are allocated to a designated community adolescent treatment supporter, and followed up through a short message service (SMS) and calls plus home visits. The type and frequency of contact is determined by whether the adolescent is “stable” or in need of enhanced support. Stable adolescents receive a monthly home visit plus a weekly, individualized SMS. An additional home visit is conducted if participants miss a scheduled clinic appointment or support-group meeting. Participants in need of further, enhanced, support receive bi-weekly home visits, weekly phone calls and daily SMS. Caregivers of adolescents in the intervention arm attend a caregiver support group. Trial outcomes are assessed through a clinical, behavioral and psychological assessment conducted at baseline and after 48 and 96 weeks. The primary outcome is the proportion who have died or have virological failure (viral load ≥1000 copies/ml) at 96 weeks. Secondary outcomes include virological failure at 48 weeks, retention in care (proportion of missed visits) and psychosocial outcomes at both time points. Statistical analyses will be conducted and reported in line with CONSORT guidelines for cluster randomized trials, including a flowchart. This study provides a unique opportunity to generate evidence of the impact of the on-going Zvandiri program, for adolescents living with HIV, on virological failure and psychosocial outcomes as delivered in a real-world setting. If found to reduce rates of treatment failure, this would strengthen support for further scale-up across Zimbabwe and likely the region more widely. Pan African Clinical Trial Registry database, registration number PACTR201609001767322
(the Zvandiri trial). Retrospectively registered on 5 September 2016.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Effect of a differentiated service delivery model on virological failure in adolescents with HIV in Zimbabwe (Zvandiri): a cluster-randomised controlled trial
Webster Mavhu,Nicola Willis,Juliet Mufuka,Sarah Bernays,Maureen Tshuma,Collin Mangenah,Hendramoorthy Maheswaran,Walter Mangezi,Tsitsi Apollo,Ricardo Araya,Helen A. Weiss,Frances M. Cowan +11 more
TL;DR: Qualitative data suggested that the multiple intervention components acted synergistically to improve the relational context in which adolescents with HIV live, supporting their improved adherence and scaling up to reduce their high rates of morbidity and mortality.
170
Retention and adherence: global challenges for the long-term care of adolescents and young adults living with HIV.
TL;DR: In this article, adolescents living with HIV are the only age group with increasing HIV mortality at a time of global scale-up of access to antiretroviral therapy (ART).
Effectiveness of community adolescent treatment supporters (CATS) interventions in improving linkage and retention in care, adherence to ART and psychosocial well-being: a randomised trial among adolescents living with HIV in rural Zimbabwe.
Nicola Willis,Amos Milanzi,Mather Mawodzeke,Chengetai Dziwa,Alice Armstrong,Innocent Yekeye,Phangisile Mtshali,Victoria M. James +7 more
TL;DR: This study found that adolescents receiving the CATS service had improved linkage to services and retention in care, improved adherence and improved psychosocial well-being compared to adolescents who did not have access to such services.
The Political, Research, Programmatic, and Social Responses to Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights in the 25 Years Since the International Conference on Population and Development.
Venkatraman Chandra-Mouli,B. Jane Ferguson,Marina Plesons,Mandira Paul,Satvika Chalasani,Avni Amin,Christina Pallitto,Marni Sommers,Ruben Avila,Kalisito Va Eceéce Biaukula,Scheherazade Husain,Eglé Janušonytė,Aditi Mukherji,Ali Ihsan Nergiz,Gogontlejang Phaladi,Chelsey Porter,Josephine Sauvarin,Alma Virginia Camacho-Huber,Sunil Mehra,Sonja Caffe,Kristien Michielsen,David Ross,Ilya Zhukov,Linda-Gail Bekker,Connie Celum,Robyn Dayton,Annabel Erulkar,Ellen Travers,Joar Svanemyr,Nankali Maksud,Lina Digolo-Nyagah,Nafissatou J. Diop,Pema Lhaki,Kamal Adhikari,Teresa Mahon,Maja Manzenski Hansen,Meghan Greeley,Joanna Herat,Danielle Engel +38 more
TL;DR: Overall, looking across the six health topics over a 25-year trajectory, there has been great progress at the global and regional levels in putting adolescent health, and especially adolescent sexual and reproductive health and rights, higher on the agenda, raising investment in this area, building the epidemiologic and evidence-base, and setting norms to guide investment and action.
108
Interventions to Improve Antiretroviral Therapy Adherence Among Adolescents and Youth in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: A Systematic Review 2015-2019.
Lindsey K Reif,Elaine J. Abrams,Stephen M. Arpadi,Batya Elul,Margaret L. McNairy,Daniel W. Fitzgerald,Louise Kuhn +6 more
TL;DR: Intensive home-based case management models of care hold promise for improving outcomes in this vulnerable population of adolescents and youth and warrant further research.
References
The PHQ-9: validity of a brief depression severity measure.
TL;DR: In addition to making criteria-based diagnoses of depressive disorders, the PHQ-9 is also a reliable and valid measure of depression severity, which makes it a useful clinical and research tool.
35.8K
Methods for the economic evaluation of health care programmes
TL;DR: Using archival material supplemented by interviews with community physicians, Jane Lewis shows how 'public health' and 'preventive medicine' have been supplanted as the central concern of medicine by curative and acute specialties.
11.3K
•Posted Content
Methods for the Economic Evaluation of Health Care Programmes
TL;DR: The fourth edition of the Methods for the Economic Evaluation of Health Care Programmes as mentioned in this paper has been thoroughly revised and updated, making it essential reading for anyone commissioning, undertaking, or using economic evaluations in health care, including health service professionals, health economists, and health care decision makers.
10.9K
•Book
Methods for the Economic Evaluation of Health Care Programmes
Michael Drummond
- 26 Feb 1987
TL;DR: The role of health economics is becoming firmly established in the evaluation of health care programs and can serve as a basic text for students hoping to understand the complex methodologies of economic evaluation.
4.9K
The Revised CONSORT Statement for Reporting Randomized Trials: Explanation and Elaboration
Douglas G. Altman test,Kenneth F. Schulz,David Moher,Matthias Egger,Frank Davidoff,Diana Elbourne,Peter C Gøtzsche,Tom Lang +7 more
TL;DR: The Consort Statement as mentioned in this paper is a group of scientists and editors developed to improve the quality of reporting of randomized, controlled trials (RCTs) by providing guidance to authors about how to improve their reporting of their trials.
Related Papers (5)
Lytt I. Gardner,Thomas P. Giordano,Gary Marks,Tracey E. Wilson,Jason Craw,Mari-Lynn Drainoni,Mari-Lynn Drainoni,Jeanne C. Keruly,Allan Rodriguez,Faye Malitz,Richard D. Moore,Lucy Bradley-Springer,Susan Holman,Charles E. Rose,Sonali Girde,Sonali Girde,Meg Sullivan,Lisa R. Metsch,Michael S. Saag,Michael J. Mugavero +19 more