Abstract

Integrating reproductive health (RH) with HIV care is a policy priority in high HIV prevalence settings, despite doubts surrounding its feasibility and varying evidence of effects on health outcomes. The process and outcomes of integrated RH-HIV care were investigated in Swaziland, through a comparative case study of four service models, ranging from fully integrated to fully stand-alone HIV services, selected purposively within one town. A client exit survey (n=602) measured integrated care received and unmet family planning (FP) needs. Descriptive statistics were used to assess the degree of integration per clinic and client demand for services. Logistic regression modelling was used to test the hypothesis that clients at more integrated sites had lower unmet FP needs than clients in a stand-alone site. Qualitative methods included in-depth interviews with clients and providers to explore contextual factors influencing the feasibility of integrated RH-HIV care delivery; data were analysed thematically, combining deductive and inductive approaches. Results demonstrated that clinic models were not as integrated in practice as had been claimed. Fragmentation of HIV care was common. Services accessed per provider were no higher at the more integrated clinics compared to stand-alone models (p>0.05), despite reported demand. While women at more integrated sites received more FP and pregnancy counselling than stand-alone models, they received condoms (a method of choice) less often, and there was no statistical evidence of difference in unmet FP needs by model of care. Multiple contextual factors influenced integration practices, including provider de-skilling within sub-specialist roles; norms of task-oriented routinised HIV care; perceptions of heavy client loads; imbalanced client-provider interactions hindering articulation of RH needs; and provider motivation challenges. Thus, despite institutional support, factors related to the social context of care inhibited provision of fully integrated RH-HIV services in these clinics. Programmes should move beyond simplistic training and equipment provision if integrated care interventions are to be sustained.

Highlights

  • Promoting integrated health care is a common public health priority in settings dominated by ‘vertical’ health programmes

  • The aims of this paper are (i) to describe how reproductive health (RH) care was being delivered within the four service models and the extent to which it was as integrated as it ‘should’ have been; (ii) to investigate whether integrated RH-HIV models were more effective in addressing family planning (FP) needs than stand-alone models; and (iii) to qualitatively explore the factors affecting the delivery of integrated care in this context

  • While the number of provider contacts was lowest at partially integrated Clinic B, the number of subservices obtained per provider at the most “integrated” Clinic A (1.3, SD 0.4), was low and not different statistically to any other site (p>0.05, Tukey-Kramer pairwise comparisons)

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Summary

Introduction

Promoting integrated health care is a common public health priority in settings dominated by ‘vertical’ health programmes This is true in high-HIV prevalence settings in subSaharan Africa, where the impetus to rapidly scale-up access to HIV care and treatment (HCTx) in the early 2000s led to the predominance of vertical programmes and stand-alone HIV services in many settings [1]. The success of ART and the transformation of HIV into a chronic condition implied the need to tackle the multiplicity of clinical and psychosocial needs of PLHIV [5] Addressing their distinct reproductive health (RH) needs has been highlighted as a particular concern by leaders of the HIV and RH communities [6,7].

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