학술논문

Mapping patient-identified barriers and facilitators to retention in HIV care and antiretroviral therapy adherence to Andersen's Behavioral Model.
Document Type
Article
Source
AIDS Care. Jul2015, Vol. 27 Issue 7, p817-828. 12p. 2 Diagrams, 5 Charts.
Subject
*ANTIVIRAL agents
*CONCEPTUAL structures
*GROUNDED theory
*HEALTH attitudes
*HEALTH services accessibility
*HIV-positive persons
*HOUSING
*HEALTH insurance
*INTERVIEWING
*LITERACY
*MATHEMATICAL models
*RESEARCH methodology
*MENTAL illness
*PATIENT compliance
*RESEARCH funding
*SOCIAL stigma
*SUBSTANCE abuse
*TRANSPORTATION
*THEORY
*SOCIAL support
*THEMATIC analysis
*PATIENTS' attitudes
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*CD4 lymphocyte count
Language
ISSN
0954-0121
Abstract
Andersen's Behavioral Model (ABM) provides a framework for understanding how patient and environmental factors impact health behaviors and outcomes. We compared patient-identified barriers/facilitators to retention in care and antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence and evaluated how they mapped to ABM. Qualitative semi-structured interviews with 51 HIV-infected adults at HIV clinics in Philadelphia, PA, in 2013 were used to explore patients' experiences with HIV care and treatment. Interview data were analyzed for themes using a grounded theory approach. Among those interviewed, 53% were male and 88% were nonwhite; 49% were retained in care, 96% were on ART, and 57% were virally suppressed. Patients discussed 18 barriers/facilitators to retention in care and ART adherence: 11 common to both behaviors (stigma, mental illness, substance abuse, social support, reminder strategies, housing, insurance, symptoms, competing life activities, colocation of services, provider factors), 3 distinct to retention (transportation, clinic experiences, appointment scheduling), and 4 distinct to adherence (medication characteristics, pharmacy services, health literacy, health beliefs). Identified barriers/facilitators mapped to all ABM domains. These data support the use of ABM as a framework for classifying factors influencing HIV-specific health behaviors and have the potential to inform the design of interventions to improve retention in care and ART adherence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]