Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Community-based DOT-HAART Accompaniment in an Urban Resource-Poor Setting

2009; Springer Science+Business Media; Volume: 14; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1007/s10461-009-9559-5

ISSN

1573-3254

Autores

Maribel Muñoz, Karen E. Finnegan, Jhon Alex Zeladita-Huamán, Adolfo Caldas, Eduardo Sánchez, Miriam Callacna, Christian Rojas, Jorge Arévalo, J.L. Sebastián, César Antonio Bonilla-Asalde, Jaime Bayona, Sonya Shin,

Tópico(s)

Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health

Resumo

From December 2005 to April 2007, we enrolled 60 adults starting antiretroviral therapy (ART) in a health district of Lima, Peru to receive community-based accompaniment with supervised antiretroviral (CASA). Paid community health workers performed twice-daily home visits to directly observe ART and offered additional medical, social and economic support to CASA participants. We matched 60 controls from a neighboring district by age, CD4 and primary referral criteria (TB status, female, neither). Using validated instruments at baseline and 12 months (time of DOT-HAART completion) we measured depression, social support, quality of life, HIV-related stigma and self-efficacy. We compared 12 month clinical and psychosocial outcomes among CASA versus control groups. CASA participants experienced better clinical and psychosocial outcomes at 12 months, including proportion with virologic suppression, increase in social support and reduction in HIV-associated stigma.

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