Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://ir.mu.ac.ke:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/6944
Title: Linkage to and engagement in HIV care in western Kenya: An observational study using population-based estimates from home-based counseling and testing
Authors: Genberg, Becky L
Naanyu, Violet
Wachira, Juddy
Hogan, Joseph W.
Sang, Edwin
Nyambura, Monicah
Odawa, Michael
Duefield, Corey
Ndege, Samson
Braitstein, Paula
Keywords: Linkage to HIV care
Engagement in HIV care
HIV treatment-as-prevention
Home-based HIV counseling and testing
Sub-Saharan Africa
Implementation research
Issue Date: 1-Jan-2016
Publisher: PMC
Abstract: Background—There is limited research characterizing the HIV care continuum with population- based data in sub-Saharan Africa. The objectives of this study were to: 1) describe engagement in care among all known HIV-positive adults in one sub-county of western Kenya; and 2) determine the time to and predictors of linkage and engagement among adults newly diagnosed via home- based counseling and testing (HBCT). Methods—AMPATH (Academic Model Providing Access to Healthcare) has provided HIV care in western Kenya since 2001 and HBCT since 2007. Following a widespread HBCT program in Bunyala sub-county, electronic medical records (EMR) were reviewed to identify uptake of care among individuals with previously known (self-reported) infection and new (identified by HBCT) HIV diagnoses as of June 2014. Engagement in HIV care was defined as an initial encounter with an HIV care provider. Cox regression analysis was used to examine the predictors of engagement among those newly diagnosed. Findings—Of the 3,482 infected adults identified, 61% had previously known infections, among whom 84% (n = 1778/2122) had ever had at least one clinical encounter within AMPATH. While 73% were registered in the EMR, only 15% (n = 209/1360) of the newly diagnosed had seen a clinician over a median of 3·4 years. The median time to engagement among the newly diagnosed was 60 days (interquartile range: 10–411 days).nterpretation—Engagement in care was high among those who at the time of HBCT were already known HIV-positive, but few who were newly diagnosed in HBCT saw an HIV care provider.
URI: http://ir.mu.ac.ke:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/6944
Appears in Collections:School of Medicine

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