Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8950484 | Journal of the Association of Nurses in AIDS Care | 2018 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
HIV care integrated into primary health care (PHC) encourages reorganized service delivery but could increase workload. In 2012-2013, we surveyed 910 patients and caregivers at two time points after integration in four clinics in Free State, South Africa. Likert surveys measured quality of care (QoC) and satisfaction with staff (SwS). QoC scores were lower for females, those older than 56Â years, those visiting clinics every 3Â months, and child health participants. Regression estimates showed QoC scores higher for ages 36-45 versus 18-25Â years, and lower for those attending clinics for more than 10Â years versus 6-12Â months. Overall, SwS scores were lower for child health attendees and higher for tuberculosis attendees compared to chronic disease care attendees. Research is needed to understand determinants of disparities in QoC and SwS, especially for child health, diabetes, and hypertension attendees, to ensure high-quality care experiences for all patients attending PHC clinics with integrated HIV care.
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Authors
Angeli MPH, PhD, Kerry MBBS, MFamMed, PhD, David MD, MHSc, FRCPC, Lubomir MSc, PhD, Annalee MD, MSc, FRCPC,