Abstract

We examined satisfaction and perceived challenges with antiretroviral therapy (ART) among people living with HIV (PLHIV) in Japan vs three other Asian countries (China, Taiwan, South Korea), and 21 non-Asian countries, using data from the 2019 Positive Perspectives Study (pooled sample size from all 25 countries = 2389). Participants in other Asian countries were more likely than those in Japan to report they missed ART ≥ 1 time in the past month because they were depressed/overwhelmed (57.4%[89/155] vs 32.0%[24/75]), had privacy concerns (56.8%[88/155] vs 30.7%[23/75]), were concerned about the potential long-term negative impacts of ART (46.5%[72/155] vs 26.7%[20/75]), or just wanted to forget about HIV (45.8%[71/155] vs 22.7%[17/75]). ART satisfaction however did not differ significantly between surveyed PLHIV in Japan (54.7%[41/75]) vs those in other Asian countries (47.7%[74/155]). The percentage who felt that daily ART dosing limited their lives was 36.0%[27/75] among participants from Japan, 48.4%[75/155] among participants from other Asian countries, and 27.3%[589/2159] among those from non-Asian countries. Within a structural equation model using pooled data from all 25 countries, positive correlations were seen between ART satisfaction and “provider engagement” (β = 0.35), high perceived control over ART dosing schedule (β = 0.28), and the belief that ART prevents HIV transmission (β = 0.16). Conversely, negative correlations were seen between ART satisfaction and experience of ART side-effects (β = − 0.24), high “ART anxiety” (β = − 0.20); and being on multi-tablet regimens (β = − 0.13). Those ART-satisfied reported higher self-rated health and greater ART adherence. These findings underscore the need for patient-centered care to enhance treatment satisfaction and improve ART adherence.

Highlights

  • The important task of improving the person-centeredness of HIV care falls on no one person but rather requires an all-handson-deck approach—People living with HIV (PLHIV), healthcare providers (HCPs), regulators, drug manufacturers, and other members of the healthcare ecosystem [5]

  • Lower antiretroviral therapy (ART) satisfaction was reported by Japanese adults who perceived their HCP did not fully meet their needs/priorities compared to those who perceived their needs were met (39.3% [11/28] vs 63.8% [30/47], χ2(1) = 4.265, p = 0.039) as well as those hiding vs not hiding their HIV medication (45.8% [22/48] vs 70.4% [19/27], χ2(1) = 4.198, p = 0.040)

  • Analysis restricted to the subset of participants who completed the maximum diffusion experiment that was embedded as part of the Positive Perspectives survey (Color figure online) positive influences on ART satisfaction were high levels of provider engagement and patient perceived control over their ART dosing schedule, whereas the strongest negative influence on ART satisfaction was medication side effects

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Summary

Introduction

The important task of improving the person-centeredness of HIV care falls on no one person but rather requires an all-handson-deck approach—PLHIV, healthcare providers (HCPs), regulators, drug manufacturers, and other members of the healthcare ecosystem [5]. AIDS and Behavior (2022) 26:1633–1651 only be optimized by simultaneously improving the patient experience of care, improving the health of populations, and reducing the per capita cost of healthcare. Within pooled data from the 2019 Positive Perspectives Study, 32.7% of PLHIV felt their main HCP did not prioritize their needs/preferences while 61.2% and 39.1% felt there was room for improving their HIV overall management and HIV medications, respectively [7]. PLHIV may be dissatisfied with their treatment even if they are virally suppressed or report good overall health [8], underscoring the need for ongoing patient-provider communication. Face-to-face patient-provider engagements may have been limited in some areas because of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic

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