Differentiated care for youth in Zimbabwe: Outcomes across the HIV care cascade

Author:

Dziva Chikwari ChidoORCID,Kranzer Katharina,Simms Victoria,Patel AmaniORCID,Tembo Mandikudza,Mugurungi Owen,Sibanda Edwin,Mufare Onismo,Ndlovu Lilian,Muzangwa Joice,Vundla Rumbidzayi,Chibaya Abigail,Hayes RichardORCID,Mackworth-Young Constance,Bernays SarahORCID,Mavodza Constancia,Hove Fadzanayi,Bandason TsitsiORCID,Dauya Ethel,Ferrand Rashida Abbas

Abstract

Youth living with HIV are at higher risk than adults of disengaging from HIV care. Differentiated models of care such as community delivery of antiretroviral therapy (ART) may improve treatment outcomes. We investigated outcomes across the HIV cascade among youth accessing HIV services in a community-based setting. This study was nested in a cluster-randomised controlled trial (CHIEDZA: Clinicaltrials.gov, Registration Number: NCT03719521) conducted in three provinces in Zimbabwe and aimed to investigate the impact of a youth-friendly community-based package of HIV services, integrated with sexual and reproductive health services for youth (16–24 years), on population-level HIV viral load (VL). HIV services included HIV testing, ART initiation and continuous care, VL testing, and adherence support. Overall 377 clients were newly diagnosed with HIV at CHIEDZA, and linkage to HIV care was confirmed for 265 (70.7%, 234 accessed care at CHIEDZA and 31 with other providers); of these 250 (94.3%) started ART. Among those starting ART at CHIEDZA who did not transfer out and had enough follow up time (>6 months), 38% (68/177) were lost-to-follow-up within six months. Viral suppression (HIV Viral Load <1000 copies/ml) among those who had a test at 6 months was 90% (96/107). In addition 1162 clients previously diagnosed with HIV accessed CHIEDZA; 714 (61.4%) had a VL test, of whom 565 (79.1%) were virally suppressed. This study shows that provision of differentiated services for youth in the community is feasible. Linkage to care and retention during the initial months of ART was the main challenge and needs concerted attention to achieve the ambitious 95-95-95 UNAIDS targets.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

Medical Research Foundation

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Reference38 articles.

1. UNAIDS. Young People and HIV 2021 [Available from: https://www.unaids.org/sites/default/files/media_asset/young-people-and-hiv_en.pdf.

2. UNAIDS. UNAIDS Data 2022 2023 [Available from: https://www.unaids.org/en/resources/documents/2023/2022_unaids_data.

3. UNAIDS. 90-90-90 An ambitious treatment target to help end the AIDS epidemic 2014 [Available from: https://www.unaids.org/sites/default/files/media_asset/90-90-90_en.pdf.

4. UNAIDS. World AIDS Day Report 2020 [Available from: https://aidstargets2025.unaids.org/assets/images/prevailing-against-pandemics_en.pdf.

5. Ministry of Health and Child Care. Zimbabwe Population-based HIV Impact Assessment 2020 (ZIMPHIA 2020) 2021 [Available from: https://phia.icap.columbia.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/010923_ZIMPHIA2020-interactive-versionFinal.pdf.

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