Investigating reasons for clinic absence among HIVinfected patients in Guinea-Bissau - a cohort study

Furtado, Alcino and Madsen, Tina and Engell-Sørensen, Thomas and Candé Baldé, Aminata and Medina, Cândida and Jespersen, Sanne and Nggida Rasmussen, Dlama and Sodemann, Morten and Langhoff Hønge, Bo (2021) Investigating reasons for clinic absence among HIVinfected patients in Guinea-Bissau - a cohort study. Journal of AIDS and HIV Research, 13 (1). pp. 8-15.

[thumbnail of E36F2E966835.pdf] Text
E36F2E966835.pdf - Published Version

Download (325kB)

Abstract

Clinic absence or lost to follow-up is still a big challenge in West Africa, especially in Guinea-Bissau, where retention in care is lower compared to all other low- or middle-income countries. The study aims to explore the reasons for clinic absence among HIV-infected patients in Guinea-Bissau, and to evaluate whether the telephone tracing is associated with patients returning to clinic follow-up. A prospective cohort analysis was conducted. Data were collected through telephone calls in which patients or their contact persons were asked for reasons for non-attendance. A total of 3,668 patients, who had been considered as clinic absent were enrolled in this study; 1,883 (51.3%) on antiretroviral treatment (ART) and 1,785 (48.7%) without ART. The median time between patients last clinic visit to time of calling was 203 days (interquartile range (IQR) 59 - 360 days). 748 (20.4%) patients and additional 364 (9.9%) contact persons were successfully reached. Reasons for clinic absence included traveling 346 (31.1%), death 211 (19.0%), and still having medicine 186 (16.7%). After tracing, 555 (49.9%) of the traced patients returned to the clinic. Nineteen percent of the absent HIV-infected patients had died by the time of calling, underscoring the need to improve patient follow-up in Guinea-Bissau. Telephone calls provide an important tool to address reasons for clinic absence and may lead to patients returning to clinical follow-up.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: e-Archives > Medical Science
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 27 Mar 2023 06:53
Last Modified: 22 Jun 2024 08:56
URI: http://ebooks.abclibraries.com/id/eprint/1087

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item