Browsing by Author "St Clair-Sullivan N"
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Item Barriers to HIV care and adherence for young people living with HIV in Zambia and mHealth.(2019) St Clair-Sullivan N; Mwamba C; Whetham J; Bolton Moore C; Darking M; Vera J; Brighton and Sussex Medical School, Brighton, East Sussex, UK.; School of Applied Social Science, Brighton, UK.; Brighton and Sussex Medical School, Brighton, East Sussex UK.; University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, USA.; Brighton and Sussex University NHS Trust, Brighton, UK.; Centre for Infectious Disease Research in Zambia, Mass Media, Zambia.; CIDRZ; Centre for Infectious Disease Research in Zambia (CIDRZ)BACKGROUND: The control of HIV/AIDS has been a contemporary public health success story however, whilst infection rates are falling and people are living longer due to antiretroviral therapy, adolescents and young people remain disproportionally affected. Infection rates and AIDS-related deaths continue to increase in these age groups in some areas globally. This has been primarily attributed to structural barriers including HIV-services not being youth friendly with opening hours conflicting with school time, fears around unintended disclosure and confidentiality, and the attitudes of healthcare professionals-but research targeting these specific age groups remains limited. Early mHealth (i.e., the use of mobile and wireless devices to assist in achieving health objectives) projects have been shown to improve health outcomes in other disease areas and health settings however, amongst people living with HIV, current research is limited. The aim of this study was to explore barriers to HIV care and the acceptability and feasibility of using mHealth to improve retention into care and ART adherence for young people living with HIV (16-24 years old) in Lusaka, Zambia. METHODS: Qualitative in-depth interviews and focus group discussions were carried out in four CIDRZ-supported health facilities in Lusaka, Zambia. Six interviews were carried out with nurses and peer-support workers working with young people living with HIV and three focus groups with a total of 24 young people. Recruitment was via purposive sampling. Interviews and focus groups were recorded, translated and transcribed and entered into NVivo for thematic analysis. RESULTS: Twenty-four of the young persons interviewed had access to mobile phones and reported using them for social networking, information gathering and regular communication. Barriers to HIV care and adherence were largely underpinned by stigma. Participants described healthcare facilities as not being conducive for confidentiality and therefore were reluctant to be seen attending or collecting medication from the pharmacy due to possible unintended disclosure and consequential HIV-related stigma. Clinic opening and waiting times and experiences with healthcare professionals also served as barriers. It was felt unanimously by participants that mHealth would be beneficial in improving retention into care and ART adherence in young people living with HIV. CONCLUSIONS: HIV-related stigma remains a barrier to care. With growing access to mobile phones and internet, and a growing population of adolescents who are already using their phones to support each other and seek information, mHealth appears to be both a feasible and acceptable tool to support retention, provide young people with information, and potentially reduce time spent at health facilities via appointment reminders and electronic drug refill requests.Item The Social Construction of Aging Among a Clinic-Based Population and Their Healthcare Workers in Zambia.(2024) Sharma A; Mwamba C; St Clair-Sullivan N; Chihota BV; Pry JM; Bolton-Moore C; Vinikoor MJ; Muula GK; Daultrey H; Gittelsohn J; Mulenga LB; Siyumbwa N; Wandeler G; Vera JH; Medical Faculty, Institute for Infectious Diseases, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland.; School of Medicine, University of California, Davis, Sacramento, CA, United States.; Department of Medicine, Heersink School of Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, United States.; Brighton and Sussex Medical School, Brighton, United Kingdom.; Center for Human Nutrition, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, United States.; Centre for Infectious Disease Research in Zambia, Lusaka, Zambia.; Department of Preclinical Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Institute for Social and Preventive Medicine, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland.; Ministry of Health, Lusaka Zambia, Lusaka, Zambia.; CIDRZ; Centre for Infectious Disease Research in Zambia (CIDRZ)OBJECTIVES: We sought to understand the social construction of aging in a clinic-based population, with and without HIV, to address gaps in care for older individuals living with HIV in Zambia. METHODS: Our exploratory qualitative study included 36 in-depth interviews with clinic clients and four focus group discussions with 36 professional and lay healthcare workers providing services to the clients. We identified themes based on social construction theory. RESULTS: At the individual level, aging was multidimensional, perceived both as an achievement in the HIV era and as a period of cognitive, physical, and economic decline. In social interactions, older individuals were often stereotyped and treated as helpless, poor, and "witches." Those living with HIV faced the additional stigma of being labeled as promiscuous. Some of the participants living without HIV refused to take daily medication for non-communicable diseases to avoid being mistaken for taking antiretroviral therapy for HIV. Older individuals wanted quality healthcare and family support to address the intersectional stigma of aging, poverty, and chronic illness. CONCLUSION: Multifaceted interventions are required to combat age-related prejudice, intersectional stigma, and discriminatory practices, particularly for people living with HIV.