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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
31

Factors influencing anti-retroviral therapy adherence in Ethiopia

Dagnew, Yimenu Wondale 11 1900 (has links)
The objective of this study was to assess levels of HAART adherence and factors affecting it. An observational, analytic, cross-sectional and quantitative study using IMB model was conducted on a randomly selected 349 HIV/AIDS patients on a HAART regimen. Data collection was done by interviewing respondents using a structured questionnaire. Both descriptive and inferential statistics used in the study. Only 80.2% of the total sample population reported a HAART adherence rate of more than or equal to 95% in this study. The findings highlight the need for on-going educational, informational and other interventions to address the knowledge, motivation and adherence behavioural skills of patients in order to improve the current levels of HAART adherence behaviour. The study also suggested the need for research into objective measures of adherence as well as longitudinal studies on adherence behaviour because strict adherence to treatment is a long-term process and not a one-time activity. / Health Studies / M.A. (Public health)
32

Outcome of the antiretroviral treatment intervention in Mankweng

Ledwaba, Ramatsobane Johanna January 2016 (has links)
Thesis presented in partial fulfilment for the degree of Master of Management (in the field of Public Sector Monitoring and Evaluation) to the Faculty of Commerce, Law, and Management, University of the Witwatersrand 2016 / The purpose of this research was to assess outcomes of the antiretroviral treatment intervention in Mankweng. The antiretroviral treatment intervention was conceived with the aim to reduce HIV transmission through viral load suppression. Literature has shown that viral load is used as a tool to measure the performance of the intervention and studies on viral load outcomes in rural settings of Limpopo are limited. For this reason, the research was focused on viral load suppression with the aim of (1) determining the proportion of adults with viral load suppression among people taking antiretroviral treatment for 12 months, and (2) identifying factors associated with failure to achieve viral load suppression among people on antiretroviral treatment for 12 months. Binomial logistic regression model was used to identify factors associated with failure to suppress viral load. This study used the theory of change to interpret its findings as well as theories of behavioural planning and self-regulation models to understand the logic that underpins the theory of change. The findings revealed that the majority (78%) of adults achieved viral load suppression, and a quarter of the individuals failed to suppress the viral load. There was no significant difference in baseline characteristics between people who achieved viral load suppression and those who did not. In addition, males, with a low CD4 and opportunistic illnesses when in the primary disease stages were more likely to fail to suppress the viral load. Moreover, people who were initiated on a 3-pill containing treatment and do not have social support were also likely to fail to achieve viral load suppression. Although the study showed a trend of likelihood towards failure to achieve viral load suppression, the estimates were not statistically significant. Theoretical arguments from this study suggest that failure to achieve viral load was attributed to poor adherence to treatment. This is supported by the logic that underpins the theory of change, in which the assumption of adherence was possibly violated. However, the results chain framework highlighted that the implementation of the intervention was effective as it led to good outcomes and an effective intervention. Drawing all this together, the study highlights the need for intensified adherence counseling during treatment in order to improve the performance of the intervention. Author: Ramatsobane Johanna Ledwaba, Thesis Title: Outcomes of the antiretroviral treatment intervention in Mankweng, Johannesburg, March 2016 / GR2018
33

An evaluation of the "antiretroviral programme" in two informal townships in the Western Cape, South Africa : exploring AIDS patients access to and experiences of the programme

Kallon, Idriss January 2010 (has links)
Thesis (MTech (Environmental Health))--Cape Peninsula University of Technology, 2010 / This study aimed to evaluate the "Antiretroviral Programme" in two informal townships, Du Noon and Doombacht, in the Westem Cape, South Africa. It evaluated how AIDS patients access Antiretroviral Therapy (ART'), their knowledge of ART's efficacy, their adherence to ART as well as their experiences of the quality of service at the Du Noon Clinic. Employing a questionnaire survey among 124 (12%) respondents on ART of the registered 1, 050 clients at the Du Noon Clinic, a systematic sampling of every 9th client (of the 1,050) was done. To generate findings of a qualitative nature, the study also used focus group discussions with a total of 36 AIDS patients on ART (18 of this number were also part of the survey), 11 community health/home-based workers and in-depth interviews with 2 nurses in charge of the rollout programme at the Clinic. Based on the survey results, the study determined that 93% (n=115) of AIDS patients access ART at the Du Noon Clinic, 75% (n=93) of respondents reported to ART adherence and 75% (n=93) displayed an understanding of ART's efficacy. It also revealed that 77% (n=95) of AIDS patients made good comments regarding the quality of service at the Du Noon Clinic. However, 25% (n=31) of AIDS patients were not adhering to ART. A Mann Whitney U test confirmed a significant relationship between the respondents' length of time on ART and the increase in CD4 count (p=0.01). However, AIDS patients who adhered to ART with the same length of time on ART have a higher CD4 count difference (p=0.04). The focus group discussions revealed AIDS patients' experiences of lack of confidentiality at the Du Noon Clinic. In addition, in five of the six focus group discussions, respondents expressed concern over disability grants not being awarded to patients with CD4 counts 200 cells lML and below². Notably, more than half of the respondents have been on treatment for more than one year. The study concluded that ART access is humanizing in the Western Cape and controversial AIDS treatment discourse has not significantly influenced the perceptions of AIDS patients regarding ART's efficacy. A high percentage (75%) of AIDS patients were adhering to ART in Du Noon and Doombacht. Addressing concerns over lack of confidentiality when accessing ART at the Du Noon Clinic, as well as the quest for disability grants within the context of AIDS treatment, could have further improved ART adherence in these communities. The study recommends that monitoring and evaluation (M&E) should involve measuring factors that influence adherence alongside accessibility to ART. Secondly, there should be mechanisms in place to maintain confidentiality in accessing ART as it is with Voluntary
34

The impact of culture on the prevention and treatment of HIV/AIDS amongst people in low-resourced areas :a social work perspective

Makhubele, Jabulani Calvin January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M. A. (Social Work)) -- University of Limpopo, 2004. / The aim of this study was to explore the impact of culture on the prevention and reatment of HIV/AIDS amongst people in low-resourced areas like Malamulele. he study focused on the lifestyles, beliefs, attitudes and perceptions around ultural elements and practices, which might impact negatively on the prevention nd treatment of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. There were three groups of research espondents namely: learners from three high schools in Malamulele, some arents of the learners and the traditional/cultural leaders. The researcher ollected both qualitative and quantitative data. The data was gathered through he use of an interview schedule (questionnaire), focus group discussions and ound-table discussion sessions. The data was presented, analysed and nterpreted by means of tables and charts. t was found that people in low-resourced (rural) areas have little knowledge about HIV/AIDS, causes, symptoms and how the disease is transmitted. Despite the fact that awareness and educational campaigns and programmes are being rendered, people in low-resourced (rural) areas have little knowledge and needed skills about prevention and treatment of the pandemic. Polygamy and extra-marital relations by men is still highly valued and viewed at high esteem. Religious structures seem to be detached to the issue of HIV/AIDS as they mentioned that talking about HIV/AIDS is immoral and against their principles. The study also tried to explore the extent to which people in low-resourced areas view and use condoms as a protective means.
35

Factors influencing antiretroviral compliance in a small group of children between eight and twelve years of age.

Phipson, P. K. January 2010 (has links)
The HIV/AIDS pandemic has implications at every level of social functioning. It affects individuals, families, communities and organisations. The burden of caring for those exposed, affected and infected is vast, but one of the most significant developments which have the potential to reduce disease burden is antiretroviral therapy. Antiretroviral therapy (ART) is complex and difficult to administer, and requires a learning process which is mediated through a number of means. Vygotskian theory was utilised to better understand the process of adherence through mediated learning, and as a framework for explaining compliance. In this study, mediated learning occurs both in the context of the clinic staff and the clinic attendees, and the caregivers and the child. Therefore Vygotsky‟s theory offers useful insight into this process. This qualitative study aimed to research the factors which contribute to ART adherence in a small sample of HIV positive children who are attending a local clinic. Eight child-caregiver dyads were interviewed, and drawings utilised to better understand child and caregiver factors which contribute to compliance. There were a number of psychosocial factors identified which contribute to compliance, or lack thereof, including social support, stigma, medication fatigue, disclosure, access difficulties, psychoeducation, and motivation. A number of qualitative differences were also identified between children who knew their HIV status and those who did not. These differences emerged primarily through the analysis of the child participants‟ drawings and there appeared to be a number of inter- and intrapersonal benefits to disclosure. The factors identified in this study, if better understood, can inform interventions to improve compliance on ART. / Thesis (M.Soc.Sci.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2010.
36

Rallying resources : strategies of therapeutic engagement among patients living with HIV in Senegal

Gilbert, Hannah January 2003 (has links)
In recent years there has been a worldwide recognition of the disparity of HIV treatment available in the West and in Sub-Saharan Africa. The West African nation of Senegal was early to implement measures that allowed for the distribution of highly effective anti-HIV therapy known as Antiretroviral (ARV) therapy to a limited number of patients. This thesis explores how patients living in Senegal who are infected with HIV have engaged in various negotiations to obtain access to treatment and other resources to meet the needs posed by their infection. These negotiations are framed by various historically embedded notions of how to engage relationships in the search for care. Strategies are also shaped by the biopolitically-laden discourse that guides the distribution of ARV therapy. This thesis traces the structure, evolution, and effects of patients' strategic negotiations in response to the introduction of this therapeutic technology.
37

The discursive construction of treatment decisions in the management of HIV disease

Moore, Alison Rotha January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Linguistics & Psychology, Department of Linguistics, 2003. / Bibliography: p. 397-424. / Introduction -- Models of shared decision-making in medicine -- Framing the study -- The analytic goals of modelling agency -- The context of treatment decision-making in HIV -- Agency and alignment -- Study conclusions and implications. / The quality of doctor-patient communication has been shown to influence treatment uptake, adherence and effectiveness in HIV medicine and elsewhere. Increasingly, it is considered essential that doctors and patients jointly participate in decisions concerning treatment. There is a growing body of literature describing joint decisionmaking and suggesting guidelines for its practice. Few of these studies, however, relate their descriptions of medical decision-making as a social process to the ways in which patterns of verbal interaction realize or foreclose on joint decision-making. -- Dominant models of medical decision-making view shared decision-making as a midpoint between enlightened paternalism and informed choice. Based on a corpus of HIV consultations audio-recorded in Sydney in the late 1990s, this thesis argues that it can be better modelled as a particular type of social process, which differs across a number of dimensions from other styles of medical decision-making, specifiable as contextual parameters of meaning. The thesis then identifies ways in which specific discursive practices realize these contextual parameters. -- A major component of the thesis focuses on agency, and a model is presented in the form of a socio-semantic network, drawing on work by van Leeuwen (1996) and others, which relates a range of grammatical features, not only transitivity patterns, to ways of construing social agency. The thesis then considers the way in which doctors and patients mobilise these and other resources for bringing together potentially conflicting points of view in framing and articulating treatment decisions. Here I draw on notions of mutual alignment (e.g., Goffman 1981) but expand the analysis of what is aligned to account for speakers' implicit discourse orientation, as well as more overt markers. -- Findings emphasise the relationship between representing and enacting agentive roles; the importance of doctors and patients mutually projecting each other's voices; and the variable and iterative character of shared decision-making. The research demonstrates how doctors and patients negotiate a complex, interactionally and symbolically mediated agency, and shows that patients often take the lead in developing more collaborative decision-making practice. There are still institutionally and socially determined limits to the degree of control patients may exercise within the consultation, many of which are of course well founded. / Mode of access: World Wide Web. / xvii, 533, [22] p. ill
38

Adherence to antiretroviral therapy at the Dora Nginza Hospital adult wellness clinic, Port Elizabeth, South Africa

Ajudua, Febisola Ibilola 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MFamMed)--Stellenbosch University, 2015. / ENGLISH SUMMARY: Background: Sub Saharan Africa is home to approximately two thirds of the world’s population of HIV positive individuals. In view of the socioeconomic challenges of the region governments have provided antiretroviral therapy free to improve chances of survival among patients. However, adherence to antiretroviral therapy is recognised as more important in predicting patient survival. Aim: The study aimed to describe the prevailing factors that influence adherence to antiretroviral therapy. Methods: The study design was carried out using three methods of data collection. Focus group discussions, semi structured interviews and a questionnaire format. Setting: This study has been conducted among adult patients attending the Dora Nginza Hospital Adult wellness clinic. Results: The methods highlighted factors that influence antiretroviral therapy revealing psychosocial factors – lack of family support, not wanting to take medicines in front of people outside the home; patient factors – co morbidities that disturb patient adherence to therapy, a lack of trust in the patient-care giver relationship, fear of the drug side effects; socioeconomic factors – patients’ inability to afford food or transport costs to clinic appointments. In the semi structured interviews, 25% of patients self reported on poor adherence while in the questionnaire 5% of patients reported poor adherence. In assessing the effect of adherence to therapy on CD4 count and viral load there was a general increase in CD 4 count and a drop in viral load indicating clinical improvement in patients on therapy. Recommendation: There is a need for clinicians developing a health relationship with patients to facilitate adherence. The interventions designed to help patients in adherence to therapy should involve the patients in question in the designing of these interventions. Conclusion: Adherence monitoring is an important aspect of managing patients on antiretroviral therapy. The factors highlighted are similar to findings of other studies in similar contexts i.e. resource poor settings. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Opsomming nie beskikbaar.
39

The use of anthropometric indices as an alternative guide to initiating antiretroviral therapy (ART) in children at the Mildmay Centre in Uganda

Nyakwezi, Sheila 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MNutr (Interdisciplinary Health Sciences. Human Nutrition))--Stellenbosch University, 2008. / Introduction: More than half a million children worldwide die from the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) and Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) each year. In Uganda, HIV/AIDS is a major cause of infant and childhood mortality. Although the government of Uganda, through various strategies, has increased access to antiretroviral drugs (ARVs), resulting in national scaling up of accessibility to antiretroviral therapy (ART), initiation of ART in resource-limited areas remains a challenge due to constraints such as the absence of or limited number of CD4 machines and related laboratory constraints. Further scaling up of ART for children would be greatly strengthened by increased access to laboratory services for CD4 counts or the introduction of alternative indicators or guidelines for the initiation of ART. Aim: This study therefore set out to investigate, through the analysis of retrospectively collected data, whether anthropometric indices (wasting - weight for height; underweight - weight for age; and stunting - height for age) could provide a useful alternative guide when deciding about initiation of ART in children aged 2-12 years in the absence of sophisticated clinical and laboratory support. Methods: The study was conducted at the Mildmay Centre, an HIV/AIDS specialist centre located in Kampala, Uganda. Parameters such as the age at which children had been initiated onto ART, duration on ART, World Health Organisation (WHO) and Centre for Disease Control (CDC) disease stages at time of initiation, anthropometry at time of initiation, CD4% staging at time of initiation, support received from food aid programmes, referral to other health centres as a result of malnutrition and care-giver nutrition education/counselling were all determined retrospectively from clinical records. Results: It was found, based on CDC (2000) growth reference charts, that of the total number of children who took part in this study (N=125), 98.4% were mildly wasted, 52.8% mildly underweight and 75.2% mildly stunted when they were initiated onto ART. Of the children, who had WHO disease staging documented - 40% (N=50), the majority - 86% (N=43) were in WHO disease staging II and III during initiation of ART. and 96% (N=48) were mildly wasted. However, the relationship between WHO disease staging and wasting, underweight, and stunting at initiation of ART in children at the Mildmay centre was not significant. The relationship between CD4% and underweight or stunted children was also not significant. It was established however, that in the absence of CD4 laboratory parameters (since CD4% is vital in the initiation of ART in children) as is the case in resource limited areas, anthropometric indices (moderate to severe wasting, weight for height -W/H) could be used concurrently with CDC and WHO disease staging to initiate ART in children. However, it is important to note that anthropometric indices on their own cannot be used as a guide for initiating ART in children. Conclusion: Anthropometric status alone cannot be used to accurately determine when to initiate ART in children 2-12 years.
40

Factors influencing anti-retroviral therapy adherence in Ethiopia

Dagnew, Yimenu Wondale 11 1900 (has links)
The objective of this study was to assess levels of HAART adherence and factors affecting it. An observational, analytic, cross-sectional and quantitative study using IMB model was conducted on a randomly selected 349 HIV/AIDS patients on a HAART regimen. Data collection was done by interviewing respondents using a structured questionnaire. Both descriptive and inferential statistics used in the study. Only 80.2% of the total sample population reported a HAART adherence rate of more than or equal to 95% in this study. The findings highlight the need for on-going educational, informational and other interventions to address the knowledge, motivation and adherence behavioural skills of patients in order to improve the current levels of HAART adherence behaviour. The study also suggested the need for research into objective measures of adherence as well as longitudinal studies on adherence behaviour because strict adherence to treatment is a long-term process and not a one-time activity. / Health Studies / M.A. (Public health)

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