Where we are now and how we can improve a qualitative study of practitioners’ perspectives on providing ART adherence support in Romania

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2016
Journal AIDS Care
Volume | Issue number 28 | 5
Pages (from-to) 653-659
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Amsterdam School of Communication Research (ASCoR)
Abstract
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. Semistructured 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.
Document type Article
Note Where we are now and how we can improve: 179123_Where we are now and how we can improve.pdf: includes corrections published in AIDS Care vol. 28 iss. 6 With online supplementary material. - Erratum publ. in: AIDS Care, 28 --- (6), i. doi: 10.1080/09540121.2016.1138754
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1080/09540121.2015.1118429
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Where we are now and how we can improve (Final published version)
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