AI Article Synopsis

  • Even individuals on antiretroviral therapy (ART) can struggle with maintaining consistent adherence over time, which can lead to serious health issues.
  • This qualitative study involved interviews with 42 adults in Kampala, Uganda, to explore how they form habits that support consistent ART medication-taking.
  • Key findings revealed that daily routines often don’t match up with medication schedules, but strategies like reminders from relatives, medication organization, and linking pill-taking to existing routines can help improve adherence.

Article Abstract

Background: Despite initial high motivation, individuals receiving antiretroviral therapy (ART) for several years may experience incomplete adherence over time, increasing their risk of HIV-related morbidity and mortality. Habits, defined as automatic and regular practices, do not rely on conscious effort, and may therefore support high long-term ART adherence.

Methods: This qualitative study contributes to the evidence on how clients with adherence problems remember and form habits to take ART medications. Free-listing and unstructured interviewing were used among 42 clinic-enrolled adults in Kampala, Uganda who were receiving ART and participating in a randomized clinical trial for treatment adherence (clinicaltrials.gov: NCT03494777). Data were coded and analyzed using inductive content analysis.

Results: Findings indicated that clients' most routine habits (eating, bathing, sleeping) did not always occur at the same time or place, making it difficult to reliably link to pill-taking times. Efforts to improve ART habits included having a relative to ask about pill-taking, re-packaging medications, leaving medications in view, using alarms, carrying water, or linking pill-taking to radio/prayer schedules. Reported challenges were adhering to ART schedules during changing employment hours, social activities, and travel.

Conclusion: While habit-forming interventions have the potential to improve ART adherence, targeting treatment-mature clients' existing routines may be crucial in this population.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7278190PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12981-020-00283-2DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Even individuals on antiretroviral therapy (ART) can struggle with maintaining consistent adherence over time, which can lead to serious health issues.
  • This qualitative study involved interviews with 42 adults in Kampala, Uganda, to explore how they form habits that support consistent ART medication-taking.
  • Key findings revealed that daily routines often don’t match up with medication schedules, but strategies like reminders from relatives, medication organization, and linking pill-taking to existing routines can help improve adherence.
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An ethnographic study of night blindness "ratauni" among women in the Terai of Nepal.

Soc Sci Med

April 1998

Division of Human Nutrition, School of Hygiene and Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.

Night blindness is the most common ocular condition representing moderate-to-severe vitamin A deficiency in children. Very little, however, is known about maternal night blindness, which has recently been reported to occur frequently during pregnancy in parts of south-east Asia. In Nepal, the prevalence of night blindness is reported to be 16%.

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