Long‐term impact of an integrated HIV/non‐communicable disease care intervention on patient retention in care and clinical outcomes in East Africa

Author:

Namakoola Ivan1,Moyo Faith2,Birungi Josephine134,Kivuyo Sokoine56,Karoli Peter5,Mfinanga Sayoki57,Nyirenda Moffat18,Jaffar Shabbar2,Garrib Anupam2

Affiliation:

1. MRC/UVRI and LSHTM Uganda Research Unit Entebbe Uganda

2. Institute for Global Health University College London London UK

3. School of Psychology and Public Health La Trobe University Melbourne Victoria Australia

4. The AIDS Support Organization Kampala Uganda

5. Muhimbili Medical Research Centre National Institute for Medical Research—Muhimbili Centre Dar Es Salaam Tanzania

6. Barcelona Institute for Global Health Hospital Clinic University of Barcelona Barcelona Spain

7. Department of International Public Health Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine Liverpool UK

8. Faculty of Epidemiology and Public Health London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine London UK

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveTo describe rates of retention in care and control of hypertension, diabetes and HIV among participants receiving integrated care services for a period of up to 24 months in East Africa.MethodsBetween 5 October 2018 and 23 June 2019 participants enrolled into a prospective cohort study evaluating the feasibility of integrated care delivery for HIV, diabetes and hypertension from a single point of care in Tanzania and Uganda (MOCCA study). Integrated care clinics were established in 10 primary healthcare facilities and care was provided routinely according to national guidelines. Initial follow‐up was 12 months. Outcomes were rates of retention in care, proportions of participants with controlled hypertension (blood pressure <140/90 mmHg), diabetes (fasting blood glucose <7.0 mmol/L) and HIV (plasma viral load <1000 copies/ml). The study coincided with the COVID‐19 pandemic response. Afterwards, all participants were approached for extended follow‐up by a further 12 months in the same clinics. We evaluated outcomes of the cohort at the end of long‐term follow‐up.ResultsThe MOCCA study enrolled 2273 participants of whom 1911 (84.5%) were retained in care after a median follow‐up of 8 months (Interquartile range: 6.8–10.7). Among these, 1283/1911 (67.1%) enrolled for a further year of follow‐up, 458 (24.0%) were unreachable, 71 (3.7%) reverted to vertical clinics (clinics providing services dedicated to study conditions), 31 (1.6%) died and 68 (3.6%) refused participation. Among participants who enrolled for longer follow‐up, mean age was 51.4 ± 11.7 years, 930 (72.5%) were female and 509 (39.7%) had multiple chronic conditions. Overall, 1236 (96.3%) [95% confidence interval 95.2%–97.3%] participants were retained in care, representing 1236/2273 (54.3%) [52.3%–56.4%] of participants ever enrolled in the study. Controlled hypertension, diabetes and HIV at the end of follow‐up was, 331/618 (53.6%) [49.5%–57.5%], 112/354 (31.6%) [26.8%–36.8%] and 332/343 (96.7%) [94.3%–98.4%] respectively.ConclusionIntegrated care can achieve high rates of retention in care long term, but control of blood pressure and blood sugar remains low.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference26 articles.

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3. UNAIDS data.Regional FactSheet: Eastern and Southern Africa.2022Available from:https://thepath.unaids.org/wp-content/themes/unaids2023/assets/files/regional_fs_eastern_southern_africa.pdf

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