AI Article Synopsis

  • A transdiagnostic psychological intervention called Common Elements Treatment Approach (CETA) was implemented in routine HIV care in Sofala, Mozambique, targeting newly diagnosed HIV+ patients with comorbid mental health symptoms.
  • The evaluation involved demographic data, mental health screenings, and interviews to identify challenges and support for program success; 382 patients (46.6%) were found to have significant mental health issues and attended a total of 1484 CETA sessions.
  • After five sessions, mental health symptoms decreased significantly, with 37.4% of patients achieving at least 50% symptom reduction, though the program faced challenges with a 29.1% loss to follow-up rate, attributing both successes and barriers to community readiness and stigma

Article Abstract

Introduction: We integrated a transdiagnostic psychological intervention (Common Elements Treatment Approach [CETA]) into routine HIV care in Sofala, Mozambique. This task-shared program screens and treats newly diagnosed HIV+ patients with comorbid mental health symptoms.

Methods: A mixed-methods evaluation included demographics, intake screening scores, mental health symptoms, and barriers/facilitators to implementation examined through interviews. Multilevel models were used to analyze factors associated with symptom improvement and loss to follow-up (LTFU).

Results: From March 2019 to June 2020, 820 individuals were screened for CETA treatment; 382 (46.6%) showed clinically significant mental health symptoms and attended 1484 CETA sessions. Of CETA patients, 71.5% (n = 273/382) had general mental distress, 7.3% (n = 28) had alcohol abuse/dependence, 12.0% (n = 46) had suicidal ideation, and 3.7% (n = 14) had other violent ideation; 66.2% (n = 253) had experienced at least 1 traumatic event at intake. Mental health symptoms decreased by 74.1% (17.0 to 4.4) after 5 CETA sessions, and 37.4% of patients (n = 143) achieved a ≥50% symptom reduction from intake. LTFU was 29.1% (n = 111), but 59.5% of LTFU patients (n = 66) achieved a ≥50% symptom reduction before LTFU. Facilitators for CETA implementation included readiness for change given the unaddressed burden of mental illness. Barriers included complexity of the intervention and stigma.

Conclusions: Approximately 45% of newly diagnosed HIV+ individuals in Mozambique have clinically significant mental health symptoms at diagnosis. Integrating CETA into routine HIV platforms has in-context feasibility. Future implementation studies can optimize strategies for patient retention and scale-up.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8851690PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/QAI.0000000000002863DOI Listing

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