Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byFrederick Hensley Modified over 8 years ago
1
MASIVUKENI: A Multimedia ART Initiation and Adherence Intervention for Resource-Limited Settings Robert H. Remien, Claude A. Mellins, Reuben Robbins, Hetta Gouse, Cheng-Shiun Leu, Jessica Rowe, Michelle Henry, Landon Myer, Nadia Nguyen, Dan Stein, and John Joska Masivukeni This NIMH-funded study enrolled HIV+ adults initiating ART at one of 2 township clinics in Cape Town (N=455). Participants were randomized to Masivukeni or Standard of Care, at a 2:1 ratio, and followed for 12 months. Masivukeni is a laptop-based, multimedia ART adherence intervention (Social Action Theory) 3-4 sessions delivered prior to/during ART initiation Follow-up sessions for defaulters Treatment support with “buddies” ART adherence and growing role of lay counselors Growing number of people initiating ART in South Africa and globally, but ART adherence and retention problems are an ongoing concern. In resource-constrained settings, increasing reliance on lay counselors to provide ART adherence counseling. Need for standardized and effective ART adherence interventions that can be scaled-up and delivered by lay counselors.
2
The Multimedia Intervention
3
Study Aim: Examine the impact of Masivukeni on viral suppression and ART initiation among HIV+ patients. Viral suppression: Medical record viral load results ≤ 400 at 12 months post ART initiation. ART initiation: Medical record indication of ART initiation by 12-months Statistical analysis Chi-square (Fisher’s Exact Test); results presented overall and by gender Among Masivukeni participants, we also examined participation of “buddies” in the intervention Methods and Sample Table 1. Baseline characteristics Predominantly Black, Xhosa- speaking Female74% Age (mean) 33 years Socioeconomic status Graduated from high school 29% Currently working42% Income ≤R1500 per month43% Health status Currently infected with TB22% CD4 count <20040% 200-35044% >35016% * Baseline characteristics did not different significantly by intervention arm
4
Results and Conclusions The Masivukeni intervention was highly acceptable to counselors and patients in busy SA clinics (Gouse et al., WEPEE569; Rowe et al., THPEE536). 74% of the sample had viral loads in medical charts at 12 months, with very high viral suppression rates (95%), and no difference between study arms. There was a trend in the Masivukeni arm for improved viral suppression when there was >50% participation by “buddy” (98% vs. 91%, p=0.1). Women in the Masivukeni intervention were more likely to initiate ART than women in the SOC (p=.02); this effect was not found for men. Masivukeni SOC N%N%p-value Among women Initiated ART 190 95.09286.80.02 Did not initiate ART 105.01413.2 Among men Initiated ART 5487.13594.60.3 Did not initiate ART 812.925.4 Next Steps: Account for LTF and missing viral load data Collect 24-month viral load data Compare clinical outcomes for study participants to general patient populations Limitations: Ceiling effect (high viral suppression) Small # of men Incomplete data (to date) Thank you to the participants, the Masivukeni team, and NIMH funding: R01-MH9557 (M. Stirratt, Ph.D.); and P30- MH43520 (C. Gordon, Ph.D.)
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.