Bottlenecks and opportunities towards achieving the targeted 95-95-95 HIV services in a rural district in Eastern Uganda
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Date
2022-12-21
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Health Services gateway
Abstract
Background: Uganda has made progress in reducing its HIV prevalence from 7.3% in 2011 to 6% in 2017, however, more needs to be done to meet the World Health Organization (WHO) target of 95% of the population knowing their HIV status, 95% enrolled on treatment and 95% achieving viral suppression. This study aimed to assess the bottlenecks and opportunities towards achieving the 95 95 95 targeted HIV services in the Bukedea district.
Methods: A mixed-methods cross-sectional study was conducted in the Bukedea district covering males and females aged 18-65 years who had consented to participate in the study. We used a purposive sampling procedure to select our study participants. Qualitative data was collected through focus group discussions, key informant interviews, and document reviews for quantitative data. Quantitative data were analyzed using STATA v 14 whereas qualitative data were analyzed using the thematic analysis approach.
Results: The challenges were grouped as patient-related, medication-related, and facility-related. The patient-related challenges were stigma, fear of taking the medication, poor nutrition, long distances, alcoholism, busy working schedules, and domestic violence. The medication-related challenges were side effects and pill burden. The facility-related challenges were inadequate pretest counseling and stock-outs. The use of anti-retroviral drugs (ART) was common in piggery and poultry and the sources of these drugs were reported to be the people on ART and the health workers.
The opportunities included home-based counseling, organizing more outreaches, counseling and health education, targeted testing, and strengthening the Village Health Teams (VHT) networks.
Conclusions: The study revealed that the major challenges towards achieving the targeted 95-95-95 HIV services were stigma, inadequate pre-test counseling, fear of disclosure, and poor adherence due to alcoholism, sharing of drugs with animals and partners. The use of anti-retroviral drugs in animal husbandry was common in the Bukedea District.
Keywords
enrolment to care, HIV testing, Viral load suppression, HIV infection, HAART, expert clients, HIV care, Adherence to HIV treatment.
Description
Copyright: © 2022 Samuel Namenkere M et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons
Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly
cited.
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Citation
Samuel Namenkere M, Mary Stella A, Linda S et al. Bottlenecks and opportunities towards achieving the targeted 95-95-95 HIV services in a rural district in Eastern Uganda [version 1; peer review: 1 not approved] F1000Research 2022, 11:1553 https://doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.122576.1