Abstract

Background & objectives: Adherence to ART is a patient specific issue influenced by a variety of situations that a patient may encounter, especially in resource-limited settings. A study was conducted to understand factors and influencers of adherence to ART and their follow ups among patients attending ART centres in Maharashtra, India. Methods: Between January and March 2009, barriers to ART adherence among 32 patients at three selected ART centres functioning under national ART roll-out programme in Maharashtra, India, were studied using qualitative methods. Consenting patients were interviewed to assess barriers to ART adherence. Constant comparison method was used to identify grounded codes. Results: Patients reported multiple barriers to ART adherence and follow up as (i) Financial barriers where the contributing factors were unemployment, economic dependency, and debt, (ii) social norm of attending family rituals, and fulfilling social obligations emerged as socio-cultural barriers, (iii) patients′ belief, attitude and behaviour towards medication and self-perceived stigma were the reasons for sub-optimal adherence, and (iv) long waiting period, doctor-patient relationship and less time devoted in counselling at the center contributed to missed visits. Interpretation & conclusions: Mainstreaming ART can facilitate access and address ′missed doses′ due to travel and migration. A ′morning′ and ′evening′ ART centre/s hours may reduce work absenteeism and help in time management. Proactive ′adherence probing′ and probing on internalized stigma might optimize adherence. Adherence probing to prevent transitioning to suboptimal adherence among patients stable on ART is recommended.

Details

Title
Barriers to ART adherence & follow ups among patients attending ART centres in Maharashtra, India
Author
Joglekar, N 1 ; Paranjape, R 1 ; Jain, R 2 ; Rahane, G 1 ; Potdar, R 1 ; Reddy, K 1 ; Sahay, S 1 

 National AIDS Research Institute, Pune 
 National AIDS Control Organization (NACO), New Delhi 
Pages
954-959
Publication year
2011
Publication date
Dec 2011
Publisher
Scientific Scholar
ISSN
0971-5916
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2258259755
Copyright
© 2011. This work is published under https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.