在八家初级保健诊所为孕妇和哺乳期妇女整合艾滋病毒暴露前预防(PrEP)服务:一项实施科学研究的结果。

Aurelie Nelson, Kalisha Bheemraj, Sarah Schoetz Dean, Alex de Voux, Lerato Hlatshwayo, Rufaro Mvududu, Natacha Berkowitz, Caroline Neumuller, Shahida Jacobs, Stephanie Fourie, Thomas Coates, Linda Gail-Bekker, Landon Myer, Dvora Joseph Davey
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:尽管撒哈拉以南非洲地区的艾滋病毒垂直传播已大幅减少,但孕妇和产后妇女中发生的艾滋病毒感染估计占艾滋病毒垂直传播的三分之一以上。自 2021 年起,针对孕妇和哺乳期妇女(PBFW)的口服暴露前预防疗法(PrEP)被纳入南非 PrEP 指南;然而,产前和产后护理中 PrEP 服务的整合仍然有限:方法:2022 年 3 月至 2023 年 9 月期间,我们评估了南非开普敦 8 家产前诊所在对医疗服务提供者进行培训和指导后,将 PrEP 纳入 PBFW 的情况。我们采用了经过调整的 "普及、效果、采用、实施和维持"(RE-AIM)框架来评估为孕妇和哺乳期妇女整合 PrEP 服务的情况。在本研究开展之前,PrEP 并非常规服务。我们针对孕妇和哺乳期妇女开展了关于提供 PrEP 的员工教学/实践培训和指导。我们对以下方面进行了评估:(1)覆盖范围,即在接受咨询和 HIV 检测的妇女中开始 PrEP 的妇女比例;(2)有效性,即孕妇与哺乳期妇女在 3 个月内继续 PrEP 的情况;(3)通过培训前后的评估和持续的指导评估采用 PrEP 整合的情况;(4)实施情况,即随着时间的推移提供 PrEP 的诊所趋势;以及(5)维持情况:干预 3 个月后继续提供 PrEP 的情况:在 8 家提供产前和产后护理的机构中,我们培训了 224 名医护人员(127 名护士和 37 名咨询师)。其中,我们指导了 60 名护士、助产士和艾滋病咨询师为孕妇和哺乳期妇女提供服务,在最终的指导评估中,80% 的护士/助产士和 65% 的咨询师得分≥ 80%。总体而言,12% 的 HIV 阴性孕妇开始接受 PrEP 治疗,其中 41% 的人继续接受 PrEP 治疗达 3 个月。在艾滋病毒呈阴性的哺乳期妇女中,14%的人开始实施 PrEP,25%的人持续实施 PrEP 达 3 个月。所有 8 家医疗机构在干预后 3 个月仍在继续提供 PrEP:在这些艾滋病高发诊所中,孕妇和哺乳期妇女开始和继续使用 PrEP 的比例迅速增加,但在哺乳期妇女中的比例有限。护士和咨询师对员工培训、指导和 PrEP 整合的接受程度很高,干预后服务仍在继续。障碍包括对母乳喂养母亲的艾滋病毒检测有限,以及需要更多受过 PrEP 培训的护士。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Integration of HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) services for pregnant and breastfeeding women in eight primary care clinics: results of an implementation science study.

Background: Although HIV vertical transmission has declined significantly in sub-Saharan Africa, incident HIV infection in pregnant and postpartum women is estimated to account for over one-third of HIV vertical transmission. Oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for pregnant and breastfeeding women (PBFW) is included in South African PrEP guidelines since 2021; however, integration of PrEP services within ante- and postnatal care remains limited.

Methods: Between March 2022 and September 2023, we evaluated the integration of PrEP for PBFW in eight antenatal clinics in Cape Town, South Africa, following training and mentorship of providers. We applied an adapted Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, and Maintenance (RE-AIM) framework to evaluate the integration of PrEP services for pregnant and breastfeeding women. Before the study, PrEP was not routinely offered. We implemented a staff didactic/practice-based training and mentorship on PrEP provision targeting PBFW. We evaluated the following: (1) Reach as the proportion of women initiating PrEP among women counselled and tested for HIV, (2) effectiveness as PrEP continuation up to 3 months by pregnant vs. breastfeeding women, (3) adoption of PrEP integration via pre- and post-training assessments and ongoing mentorship assessments, (4) implementation through clinic trends of PrEP offer over time, and (5) maintenance: continued PrEP offer 3 months following the intervention.

Results: In 8 facilities providing ante- and postnatal care, we trained 224 healthcare providers (127 nurses and 37 counsellors). Of those, we mentored 60 nurses, midwives, and HIV counsellors working with pregnant and breastfeeding women, with 80% of nurse/midwives and 65% of counsellors scoring ≥ 80% on the final mentoring assessment. Overall, 12% of HIV-negative pregnant women started PrEP, and 41% of those continued PrEP up to 3 months. Among HIV-negative breastfeeding women, 14% initiated PrEP, and 25% continued PrEP up to 3 months. All eight facilities continued providing PrEP 3 months post intervention.

Conclusions: In these high HIV prevalence clinics, the proportion of pregnant and breastfeeding women initiating and continuing PrEP rapidly increased but was limited among breastfeeding women. Staff training, mentorship, and PrEP integration were well-adopted by nurses and counsellors, and services continued following the intervention. Barriers included limited HIV testing of breastfeeding mothers and need for additional PrEP-trained nurses.

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