Patient-level benefits associated with decentralization of antiretroviral therapy services to primary health facilities in Malawi and Uganda.

George Abongomera; Levison Chiwaula; Paul Revill; Travor Mabugu; Edward Tumwesige; Misheck Nkhata; Fabian Cataldo; J van Oosterhout; Robert Colebunders; Adrienne K Chan; +6 more... Cissy Kityo; Charles Gilks; James Hakim; Janet Seeley ORCID logo; Diana M Gibb; Deborah Ford; (2018) Patient-level benefits associated with decentralization of antiretroviral therapy services to primary health facilities in Malawi and Uganda. Int Health, 10 (1). pp. 8-19. ISSN 1876-3405 DOI: 10.1093/inthealth/ihx061
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BACKGROUND: The Lablite project captured information on access to antiretroviral therapy (ART) at larger health facilities ('hubs') and lower-level health facilities ('spokes') in Phalombe district, Malawi and in Kalungu district, Uganda. METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional survey among patients who had transferred to a spoke after treatment initiation (Malawi, n=54; Uganda, n=33), patients who initiated treatment at a spoke (Malawi, n=50; Uganda, n=44) and patients receiving treatment at a hub (Malawi, n=44; Uganda, n=46). RESULTS: In Malawi, 47% of patients mapped to the two lowest wealth quintiles (Q1-Q2); patients at spokes were poorer than at a hub (57% vs 23% in Q1-Q2; p<0.001). In Uganda, 7% of patients mapped to Q1-Q2; patients at the rural spoke were poorer than at the two peri-urban facilities (15% vs 4% in Q1-Q2; p<0.001). The median travel time one way to a current ART facility was 60 min (IQR 30-120) in Malawi and 30 min (IQR 20-60) in Uganda. Patients who had transferred to the spokes reported a median reduction in travel time of 90 min in Malawi and 30 min in Uganda, with reductions in distance and food costs. CONCLUSIONS: Decentralizing ART improves access to treatment. Community-level access to treatment should be considered to further minimize costs and time.


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