Authors
Melissa H Watt, Suzanne Maman, Jo Anne Earp, Eugenia Eng, Philip W Setel, Carol E Golin, Mark Jacobson
Publication date
2009/5/1
Journal
Social science & medicine
Volume
68
Issue
10
Pages
1793-1800
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
Although HIV positive patients' adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART) is relatively high in African nations, as compared with industrialized nations, few studies have explored why. In the research presented here we aimed to understand the dynamics of good adherence to ART among patients receiving free ART and HIV-related services from a clinic in Arusha, Tanzania. We conducted individual semi-structured interviews with 6 health care providers and 36 patients at a health care center in Arusha in 2006. Interviews were conducted in Swahili using interview guides informed by social cognitive theory. All interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed in Kiswahili, translated into English and coded for themes and patterns with ATLAS. ti. Of the 36 patients interviewed (mean time on ART 9.8 months; range 1–23 months), 32 reported perfect adherence in the previous month. Self-reported adherence was high despite …
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