Longitudinal analysis to assess the contribution of the multi-month scripting (mms) regime on art outcomes among adult persons living with HIV in Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe has a generalized HIV epidemic. Since 2015, the national ART program has been rolling out a suite of differentiated models of care in line with the 2013 WHO guidelines. One of the common models adopted by the country is Multi-Month Scripting (MMS) for stable ART patients. Insufficient evide...

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Main Author: Sanhokwe, Hamfrey
Language:English
Published: Midlands State University 2018
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11408/3309
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author Sanhokwe, Hamfrey
author_facet Sanhokwe, Hamfrey
author_sort Sanhokwe, Hamfrey
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description Zimbabwe has a generalized HIV epidemic. Since 2015, the national ART program has been rolling out a suite of differentiated models of care in line with the 2013 WHO guidelines. One of the common models adopted by the country is Multi-Month Scripting (MMS) for stable ART patients. Insufficient evidence exists in the country around the contribution of MMS to patient level ART outcomes, almost two years after it was rolled nationally. A retrospective cohort study was conducted at the five ART clinics in Chitungwiza. Secondary sources of data were used in the research. Longitudinal data analysis techniques were applied, including survival analysis. Among the 305 ART patients with HIV/AIDS who initiated ART, there were five AIDS-related deaths; two within the first 6 months, two between the 42-48-month period and one in the 54-60-month period. Overall, the median survival time (53 months) was the same among MMS and non-MMS clients. The retention rates at 12, 24, 36, 48 and 60 months were 98%, 97%, 96% 91% and 87% respectively, and were not statistically different between MMS and non MMS clients. There was a statistically significant change in the CD4 counts (initial vs. follow up) for non-MMS clients. There were significant gains in weight among both MMS and nonMMS clients. The outcomes of interest (weight, survival, retention and changes in CD4 cell count) were primarily associated with sex, age, WHO stage at initiation, receipt of Cotrimoxazole and level of education, among other factors, albeit at varying degrees of significance. Two years into the roll out of MMS, this study suggests that there are no statistically significant differences in observed outcomes between clients on MMS and those not on MMS. More research is necessary to conclusively determine the contribution of each of the models of differentiated care to observed outcomes. However, the contribution of MMS to observed ART outcomes could as well be clinically significant. The factors associated with the clinical outcomes look similar to prior studies, albeit at varying levels of statistical significance.
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spelling ir-11408-33092022-06-27T13:49:05Z Longitudinal analysis to assess the contribution of the multi-month scripting (mms) regime on art outcomes among adult persons living with HIV in Zimbabwe Sanhokwe, Hamfrey HIV and AIDS Antiretroviral treatment Multi-month scripting Immunological outcomes Zimbabwe has a generalized HIV epidemic. Since 2015, the national ART program has been rolling out a suite of differentiated models of care in line with the 2013 WHO guidelines. One of the common models adopted by the country is Multi-Month Scripting (MMS) for stable ART patients. Insufficient evidence exists in the country around the contribution of MMS to patient level ART outcomes, almost two years after it was rolled nationally. A retrospective cohort study was conducted at the five ART clinics in Chitungwiza. Secondary sources of data were used in the research. Longitudinal data analysis techniques were applied, including survival analysis. Among the 305 ART patients with HIV/AIDS who initiated ART, there were five AIDS-related deaths; two within the first 6 months, two between the 42-48-month period and one in the 54-60-month period. Overall, the median survival time (53 months) was the same among MMS and non-MMS clients. The retention rates at 12, 24, 36, 48 and 60 months were 98%, 97%, 96% 91% and 87% respectively, and were not statistically different between MMS and non MMS clients. There was a statistically significant change in the CD4 counts (initial vs. follow up) for non-MMS clients. There were significant gains in weight among both MMS and nonMMS clients. The outcomes of interest (weight, survival, retention and changes in CD4 cell count) were primarily associated with sex, age, WHO stage at initiation, receipt of Cotrimoxazole and level of education, among other factors, albeit at varying degrees of significance. Two years into the roll out of MMS, this study suggests that there are no statistically significant differences in observed outcomes between clients on MMS and those not on MMS. More research is necessary to conclusively determine the contribution of each of the models of differentiated care to observed outcomes. However, the contribution of MMS to observed ART outcomes could as well be clinically significant. The factors associated with the clinical outcomes look similar to prior studies, albeit at varying levels of statistical significance. 2018-11-07T09:40:16Z 2018-11-07T09:40:16Z 2017 http://hdl.handle.net/11408/3309 en open Midlands State University
spellingShingle HIV and AIDS
Antiretroviral treatment
Multi-month scripting
Immunological outcomes
Sanhokwe, Hamfrey
Longitudinal analysis to assess the contribution of the multi-month scripting (mms) regime on art outcomes among adult persons living with HIV in Zimbabwe
title Longitudinal analysis to assess the contribution of the multi-month scripting (mms) regime on art outcomes among adult persons living with HIV in Zimbabwe
title_full Longitudinal analysis to assess the contribution of the multi-month scripting (mms) regime on art outcomes among adult persons living with HIV in Zimbabwe
title_fullStr Longitudinal analysis to assess the contribution of the multi-month scripting (mms) regime on art outcomes among adult persons living with HIV in Zimbabwe
title_full_unstemmed Longitudinal analysis to assess the contribution of the multi-month scripting (mms) regime on art outcomes among adult persons living with HIV in Zimbabwe
title_short Longitudinal analysis to assess the contribution of the multi-month scripting (mms) regime on art outcomes among adult persons living with HIV in Zimbabwe
title_sort longitudinal analysis to assess the contribution of the multi-month scripting (mms) regime on art outcomes among adult persons living with hiv in zimbabwe
topic HIV and AIDS
Antiretroviral treatment
Multi-month scripting
Immunological outcomes
url http://hdl.handle.net/11408/3309
work_keys_str_mv AT sanhokwehamfrey longitudinalanalysistoassessthecontributionofthemultimonthscriptingmmsregimeonartoutcomesamongadultpersonslivingwithhivinzimbabwe