Abstract

Introduction:Health care workers (HCWs), especially from sub-Saharan Africa, are at risk of occupational exposure to HIV. Post exposure prophylaxis (PEP) can reduce this risk. There is no published information from Zimbabwe, a high HIV burden country, about how PEP works. We therefore assessed how the PEP programme performed at the Parirenyatwa Hospital, Harare, Zimbabwe, from 2017–2018.Methodology:This was a cohort study using secondary data from the staff clinic paper-based register. The chi square test and relative risks were used to assess associations.Results:There were 154 HCWs who experienced occupational injuries. The commonest group was medical doctors (36%) and needle sticks were the most frequent type of occupational injury (74%). The exposure source was identified in 114(74%) occupational injuries: 91% of source patients were HIV-tested and 77% were HIV-positive. All but two HCWs were HIV-tested, 148 were eligible for PEP and 142 (96%) started triple therapy, all within 48 hours of exposure. Of those starting PEP, 15 (11%) completed 28 days, 13 (9%) completed < 28 days and in the remainder PEP duration was not recorded. There were no HCW characteristics associated with not completing PEP. Of those starting PEP, 9 (6%) were HIV-tested at 6-weeks, 3 (2%) were HIV-tested at 3-months and 1 (< 1%) was HIV-tested at 6-months: all HIV-tests were negative.Conclusions:While uptake of PEP was timely and high, the majority of HCWs failed to complete the 28-day treatment course and even fewer attended for follow-up HIV-tests. Various changes are recommended to promote awareness of PEP and improve adherence to guidelines.

Highlights

  • Health care workers (HCWs), especially from sub-Saharan Africa, are at risk of occupational exposure to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)

  • A three drug regimen for 28 days is preferred consisting of tenofovir (TDF) and lamivudine (3TC) as the backbone nucleos(t)ide regimen combined with lopinavir / ritonavir (LPV/r) or atazanavir / ritonavir (ATV/r)

  • Current HIV-prevalence is estimated at 14.6% and annual HIV incidence at 0.45% among the 15-64 year old adult population according to the concluded Zimbabwe Population-based HIV Impact Assessment (ZIMPHIA) survey [17]

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Summary

Introduction

Health care workers (HCWs), especially from sub-Saharan Africa, are at risk of occupational exposure to HIV. Observational evidence has accumulated about the risks of HIV transmission in relation to the type of occupational injury (percutaneous, mucous membrane), the characteristics of the source patient (HIV-positive, severely immunosuppressed), the timing and duration of PEP and the types of regimen used [2]. This evidence has informed World Health Organization (WHO) Guidelines on PEP over the last few years [3,4,5]. Follow-up care is context specific, and in a developed country would

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