Abstract

ABSTRACTIn the era of widespread access to antiretroviral therapy, people living with HIV survive; however, this comes with new experiences of comorbidities and HIV-related disability posing new challenges to rehabilitation professionals and an already fragile health system in Southern Africa. Public health approaches to HIV need to include not only prevention, treatment and support but also rehabilitation. While some well-resourced countries have developed rehabilitation approaches for HIV, resource-poor settings of Southern Africa lack a model of care that includes rehabilitation approaches providing accessible and comprehensive care for people living with HIV. In this study, a learning in action approach was used to conceptualize a comprehensive model of care that addresses HIV-related disability and a feasible rehabilitation framework for resource-poor settings. The study used qualitative methods in the form of a focus group discussion with thirty participants including people living with HIV, the multidisciplinary healthcare team and community outreach partners at a semi-rural health facility in South Africa. The discussion focused on barriers and enablers of access to rehabilitation. Participants identified barriers at various levels, including transport, physical access, financial constraints and poor multi-stakeholder team interaction. The results of the group discussions informed the design of an inclusive model of HIV care. This model was further informed by established integrated rehabilitation models. Participants emphasized that objectives need to respond to policy, improve access to patient-centered care and maintain a multidisciplinary team approach. They proposed that guiding principles should include efficient communication, collaboration of all stakeholders and leadership in teams to enable staff to implement the model. Training of professional staff and lay personnel within task-shifting approaches was seen as an essential enabler to implementation. The health facility as well as outreach services such as intermediate clinics, home-based care, outreach and community-based rehabilitation was identified as important structures for potential rehabilitation interventions.

Highlights

  • Rehabilitation professionals in South Africa have seen the effect of people with HIV living longer but facing disabling effects of the virus, other comorbidities and associated side effects of antiretroviral therapy (Nixon et al, 2011)

  • The rehabilitation framework governing healthcare practice in public South African sectors is under scrutiny as researchers in the field of HIV and disability aim to identify and address the gaps embedded in these systems (Cobbing et al, 2013)

  • The results revealed iterated themes from narratives which were integrated into established existing frameworks of rehabilitation models that use four main categories: objectives, principles, enablers and settings as their foundation (Chetty & Hanass-Hancock, 2015)

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Summary

Introduction

Rehabilitation professionals in South Africa have seen the effect of people with HIV living longer but facing disabling effects of the virus, other comorbidities and associated side effects of antiretroviral therapy (Nixon et al, 2011). Rehabilitation professionals need to approach HIVrelated disability within this evolving context to address the dynamic needs of people living with HIV in South Africa. South Africa’s current National Strategic Plan (NSP) for sexually transmitted infections (STIs) HIV and TB for 2012–2016 incorporate disability. This NSP recognizes people with disabilities as a key population and lists a number of services in relation to access, prevention, treatment, care and support.

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