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Process evaluation for the adaptation, testing and dissemination of a mobile health platform to support people with HIV and tuberculosis in Irkutsk, Siberia
oleh: Rebecca Dillingham, Yulia Plotnikova, Scott Heysell, Jacqueline Hodges, Ava Lena Waldman, Olga Koshkina, Alexey Suzdalnitsky, Jason Schwendinger, Serhiy Vitko, Alexey Plenskey, Elena Moiseeva, Mikhail Koshcheyev, Sergey Sebekin, Svetlana Zhdanova, Oleg Ogarkov
Format: | Article |
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Diterbitkan: | BMJ Publishing Group 2022-03-01 |
Deskripsi
Objectives We developed and tested a mobile health-based programme to enhance integration of HIV and tuberculosis (TB) care and to promote a patient-centred approach in a region of high coinfection burden. Phases of programme development included planning, stakeholder interviews and platform re-build, testing and iteration.Setting In Irkutsk, Siberia, HIV/TB coinfection prevalence is high relative to the rest of the Russian Federation.Participants Pilot testing occurred for a cohort of 60 people with HIV and TB.Results Key steps emerged to ensure the mobile health-based programme could be operational and adequately adapted for the context, including platform language adaptation, optimisation of server management, iteration of platform features, and organisational practice integration. Pilot testing of the platform rebuild yielded favourable patient perceptions of usability and acceptability at 6 months (n=47 surveyed), with 18 of 20 items showing scores above 4 (on a scale from 1 to 5) on average. Development of this mobile health-based programme for integrated care of infections highlighted the importance of several considerations for tailoring these interventions contextually, including language adaptation and technological capacity, but also, importantly, contextualised patient preferences related to privacy and communication with peers and/or providers, existing regional capacity for care coordination of different comorbidities, and infection severity and treatment requirements.Conclusions Our experience demonstrated that integration of care for TB and HIV can be well served by using multimodal mobile health-based programmes, which can enhance communication and streamline workflow between providers across multiple collaborating institutions and improve continuity between inpatient and outpatient care settings. Further study of programme impact on contextual disease-related stigma and social isolation as well as evaluation of implementation on a broader scale for HIV care is currently under way.Trial registration number NCT03819374.