Document detail
ID

doi:10.1186/s12981-024-00612-9...

Author
Dadi, Tegene Legese Tegene, Yadessa Vollebregt, Nienke Medhin, Girmay Spigt, Mark
Langue
en
Editor

BioMed Central

Category

Medicine & Public Health

Year

2024

listing date

5/8/2024

Keywords
self-management hiv/aids care perspectives on self-management low-income settings experts perspectives life medical health self-management patients plwh providers treatment hiv service
Metrics

Abstract

Background Self-management is the most important strategy to improve quality of life in patients with a chronic disease.

Despite the increasing number of people living with HIV (PLWH) in low-income countries, very little research on self-management is conducted in this setting.

The aim of this research is to understand the perspectives of service providers and experts on the importance of self-management for PLWH.

Methods A systematizing expert interview type of qualitative methodology was used to gain the perspectives of experts and service providers.

The study participants had experience in researching, managing, or providing HIV service in east and southern African (ESA) countries.

All the interviews were audio recorded, transcribed, and translated to English.

The quality of the transcripts was ensured by randomly checking the texts against the audio record.

A thematic analysis approach supported by Atlas TI version 9 software.

Result PLWH face a variety of multi-dimensional problems thematized under contextual and process dimensions.

The problems identified under the contextual dimension include disease-specific, facility-related, and social environment-related.

Problems with individual origin, such as ignorance, outweighing beliefs over scientific issues, low self-esteem, and a lack of social support, were mostly highlighted under the process dimensions.

Those problems have a deleterious impact on self-management, treatment outcomes, and the quality of life of PLWH.

Low self-management is also a result of professional-centered service delivery in healthcare facilities and health service providers’ incapacity to comprehend a patient’s need beyond the medical concerns.

Participants in the study asserted that patients have a significant stake in enhancing treatment results and quality of life through enhancing self-management.

Conclusion and recommendation HIV patients face multifaceted problems beyond their medical issues.

The success of medical treatment for HIV is strongly contingent upon patients’ self-management practices and the supportive roles of their family, society, and health service providers.

The development and integration of self-management practices into clinical care will benefit patients, their families, and the health system.

Dadi, Tegene Legese,Tegene, Yadessa,Vollebregt, Nienke,Medhin, Girmay,Spigt, Mark, 2024, The importance of self-management for better treatment outcomes for HIV patients in a low-income setting: perspectives of HIV experts and service providers, BioMed Central

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