BACKGROUND:Failure to keep people living with HIV engaged in life-long care and treatment has serious implications for individual and population-level health. Nested within a four-province study of HIV care and treatment outcomes, we explored the dynamic role of social and service-related factors influencing retention in HIV care in Zambia. METHODS:From a stratified random sample of 31 facilities, eight clinics were selected, one urban and one rural from each province. Across these sites we conducted a total of 69 in-depth interviews, including with patients (including pregnant women) engaged in-care (n = 28), disengaged from care (n = 15), engaged facility transferee (n = 12), and friends/family of deceased patients (n = 14). At the same s...
BackgroundRetention in care is key to improving HIV outcomes. The goal of this study was to describe...
BACKGROUND. HIV remains a major public health challenge in Zambia.The roll-out of antiretroviral tre...
CITATION: Fuente-Soro, L. et al. 2019. Tipping the balance towards long-term retention in the HIV ca...
Background: Failure to keep people living with HIV engaged in life-long care and treatment has serio...
BACKGROUND:The implementation of quality HIV control programs is crucial for the achievement of the ...
Background: Re-engagement in care is a critical, but poorly understood step in the HIV care cascade ...
Thesis (Dr.P.H.)--Boston UniversityBackground: HIV is now manageable as a chronic disease for those ...
Retention in HIV care is an important public health issue as it improves survival and quality of lif...
Background: Retention in HIV care improves survival and reduces the risk of HIV transmission to othe...
Retention in HIV care is critical to decrease disease-related mortality and morbidity and achieve na...
Introduction: While disengagement from HIV care threatens the health of persons living with HIV (PLW...
Abstract Introduction While disengagement from HIV care threatens the health of persons living with ...
Retention to HIV care is vital for patients' survival, to prevent onward transmission and emergence ...
Retention to HIV care is vital for patients’ survival, to prevent onward transmission and emergence ...
BackgroundIn public health HIV treatment programs in Africa, long-term retention remains a challenge...
BackgroundRetention in care is key to improving HIV outcomes. The goal of this study was to describe...
BACKGROUND. HIV remains a major public health challenge in Zambia.The roll-out of antiretroviral tre...
CITATION: Fuente-Soro, L. et al. 2019. Tipping the balance towards long-term retention in the HIV ca...
Background: Failure to keep people living with HIV engaged in life-long care and treatment has serio...
BACKGROUND:The implementation of quality HIV control programs is crucial for the achievement of the ...
Background: Re-engagement in care is a critical, but poorly understood step in the HIV care cascade ...
Thesis (Dr.P.H.)--Boston UniversityBackground: HIV is now manageable as a chronic disease for those ...
Retention in HIV care is an important public health issue as it improves survival and quality of lif...
Background: Retention in HIV care improves survival and reduces the risk of HIV transmission to othe...
Retention in HIV care is critical to decrease disease-related mortality and morbidity and achieve na...
Introduction: While disengagement from HIV care threatens the health of persons living with HIV (PLW...
Abstract Introduction While disengagement from HIV care threatens the health of persons living with ...
Retention to HIV care is vital for patients' survival, to prevent onward transmission and emergence ...
Retention to HIV care is vital for patients’ survival, to prevent onward transmission and emergence ...
BackgroundIn public health HIV treatment programs in Africa, long-term retention remains a challenge...
BackgroundRetention in care is key to improving HIV outcomes. The goal of this study was to describe...
BACKGROUND. HIV remains a major public health challenge in Zambia.The roll-out of antiretroviral tre...
CITATION: Fuente-Soro, L. et al. 2019. Tipping the balance towards long-term retention in the HIV ca...