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Improving HIV Treatment Adherence through a Public Private Partnership in Zambia

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dc.contributor.author Fomundam, Henry
dc.contributor.author Maranga, Andrew
dc.contributor.author Kamanga, Joseph
dc.contributor.author Tesfay, Abraham
dc.contributor.author Choola, Tamara
dc.contributor.author Nyangu, Stephen
dc.contributor.author Wutoh, Anthony
dc.date.accessioned 2018-06-26T06:31:36Z
dc.date.available 2018-06-26T06:31:36Z
dc.date.issued 2014-03
dc.identifier.citation World Journal of AIDS, 2014, 4, 107-117 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/wja.2014.41014
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1572
dc.description.abstract Background: Effective ART with low viral loads and absence of STIs significantly reduce chances of sexual transmission of HIV. ART is therefore a key pillar in HIV prevention. Appropriate support is however essential for optimum treatment outcome, patient safety and HIV prevention benefit. The scale-up of ART continues to strain the already overstretched human resources in public facilities, impacts on the quality of care, and contributes to loss to follow-up. Task shifting is therefore a strategy to augment the limited human resources. Methodology: In partnership with the Livingstone General Hospital (LGH) and four private pharmacists, the COH III Project through Howard University is promoting quality HIV care by engaging the pharmacists in adherence counselling and treatment monitoring. The LGH ART pharmacist allocates consenting stable ART clients to pharmacies based on willingness to be referred and patient preference. Patients are given schedule of visits to pharmacies where the pharmacists provide medication/adherence counselling and monitor side effects. Patients with medication/treatment issues are referred back to the LGH ART clinic for follow-up. Results: Between October 2012 and August 2013, 280 patients were enrolled and followed up by the four pharmacists. 69% of patients visited the pharmacy at least once, 25% at least twice and 13% at least thrice. The 33 client referrals by pharmacists to LGH were related to adverse drug reactions, suspected treatment failure, pregnancy, and treatment monitoring. The intervention has reduced workload for the ART pharmacist; improved communication of treatment challenges and identification of patients with medication related problems, and reduced travel distances and waiting times. This has resulted in improved adherence and better patient outcomes. Conclusion: Private pharmacists present an opportunity to improve quality of HIV interventions in poor human resource capacity settings. The necessary legal and regulatory framework needs to however be developed to guide the process en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Scientific Research en_US
dc.subject Public-Private Partnership en_US
dc.subject Adherence Support en_US
dc.subject Private Pharmacists en_US
dc.subject Treatment Monitoring en_US
dc.subject Human Resources Challenge en_US
dc.title Improving HIV Treatment Adherence through a Public Private Partnership in Zambia en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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