13 research outputs found
Integrated management of HIV/NCDs: knowledge, attitudes, and practices of health care workers in Gaborone, Botswana
Background: The epidemiologic transition and double disease burden from chronic infections and Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) worldwide requires re-engineering of healthcare delivery systems. Healthcare workers (HCWs) need to adapt to new integrated disease management approaches and change from current disease-specific management. Objectives: The study aimed to determine HCWs knowledge, capacity and skills for management of NCDs among HIV patients and their attitudes towards integrated HIV/NCDs disease management approaches for future clinical practice. Methods: Descriptive cross-sectional survey among HCWs attending to HIV patients at selected government facilities. Results: One hundred out of 105 responses were analysed. Only 6% could fully define NCDs. Awareness levels of NCDs were high: Diabetes and hypertension 98%; cancer 96%; cardiovascular diseases 86%. However, 11.8% and 58% classified HIV and malaria respectively as NCDs. Most respondents (88%) believe that integrating HIV/NCDs care would be good use of resources while 62% disagreed with current separate facility management of HIV patients with NCDs. Over 60% routinely screened HIV patients for NCDs risk factors: Smoking (87.2%), alcohol (90.8%), diet (84.9%) and physical activity (73.5%). Conclusion: There were gaps in detailed knowledge on NCDs, but positive attitude towards routine primary care integrated HIV/NCDs management, showing likely support for implementation of such policy.Keywords: Non-communicable diseases, knowledge, attitude, HIV, integration
Integrated management of HIV/NCDs: knowledge, attitudes, and practices of health care workers in Gaborone, Botswana
Background: The epidemiologic transition and double disease burden from
chronic infections and Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) worldwide
requires re-engineering of healthcare delivery systems. Healthcare
workers (HCWs) need to adapt to new integrated disease management
approaches and change from current disease-specific management.
Objectives: The study aimed to determine HCWs knowledge, capacity and
skills for management of NCDs among HIV patients and their attitudes
towards integrated HIV/NCDs disease management approaches for future
clinical practice. Methods: Descriptive cross-sectional survey among
HCWs attending to HIV patients at selected government facilities.
Results: One hundred out of 105 responses were analysed. Only 6% could
fully define NCDs. Awareness levels of NCDs were high: Diabetes and
hypertension 98%; cancer 96%; cardiovascular diseases 86%. However,
11.8% and 58% classified HIV and malaria respectively as NCDs. Most
respondents (88%) believe that integrating HIV/NCDs care would be good
use of resources while 62% disagreed with current separate facility
management of HIV patients with NCDs. Over 60% routinely screened HIV
patients for NCDs risk factors: Smoking (87.2%), alcohol (90.8%), diet
(84.9%) and physical activity (73.5%). Conclusion: There were gaps in
detailed knowledge on NCDs, but positive attitude towards routine
primary care integrated HIV/NCDs management, showing likely support for
implementation of such policy
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Cancer Incidence following Expansion of HIV Treatment in Botswana
Background: The expansion of combination antiretroviral treatment (ART) in southern Africa has dramatically reduced mortality due to AIDS-related infections, but the impact of ART on cancer incidence in the region is unknown. We sought to describe trends in cancer incidence in Botswana during implementation of the first public ART program in Africa. Methods: We included 8479 incident cases from the Botswana National Cancer Registry during a period of significant ART expansion in Botswana, 2003–2008, when ART coverage increased from 7.3% to 82.3%. We fit Poisson models of age-adjusted cancer incidence and counts in the total population, and in an inverse probability weighted population with known HIV status, over time and estimated ART coverage. Findings: During this period 61.6% of cancers were diagnosed in HIV-infected individuals and 45.4% of all cancers in men and 36.4% of all cancers in women were attributable to HIV. Age-adjusted cancer incidence decreased in the HIV infected population by 8.3% per year (95% CI -14.1 to -2.1%). However, with a progressively larger and older HIV population the annual number of cancers diagnosed remained constant (0.0% annually, 95% CI -4.3 to +4.6%). In the overall population, incidence of Kaposi’s sarcoma decreased (4.6% annually, 95% CI -6.9 to -2.2), but incidence of non-Hodgkin lymphoma (+11.5% annually, 95% CI +6.3 to +17.0%) and HPV-associated cancers increased (+3.9% annually, 95% CI +1.4 to +6.5%). Age-adjusted cancer incidence among individuals without HIV increased 7.5% per year (95% CI +1.4 to +15.2%). Interpretation Expansion of ART in Botswana was associated with decreased age-specific cancer risk. However, an expanding and aging population contributed to continued high numbers of incident cancers in the HIV population. Increased capacity for early detection and treatment of HIV-associated cancer needs to be a new priority for programs in Africa
Impact of HIV Infection on the Clinical Presentation and Survival of Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma: A Prospective Observational Study From Botswana
Purpose: Botswana has a high prevalence of HIV infection. Currently, there are few data regarding the sociodemographic factors, clinical characteristics, and outcomes of non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL)—an AIDS-defining cancer—in the country. Patients and Methods: This study used a prospective cancer registry to identify patients with a new diagnosis of NHL reporting for specialty cancer care at three hospitals in Botswana between October 2010 and August 2016. Treatment patterns and clinical outcomes were analyzed. Results: One hundred four patients with a new diagnosis of NHL were enrolled in this study, 72% of whom had HIV infection. Compared with patients not infected with HIV, patients infected with HIV were younger (median age, 53.9 v 39.1 years; P = .001) and more likely to present with an aggressive subtype of NHL (65.5% v 84.0%; P = .008). All patients infected with HIV received combined antiretroviral therapy throughout the course of the study, and similar chemotherapeutic regimens were recommended for all patients, regardless of subtype or HIV status (six to eight cycles of cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone; or cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone plus rituximab). There was no difference in 1-year mortality among patients not infected with HIV and patients infected with HIV (unadjusted analysis, 52.9% v 37.1%; hazard ratio [HR], 0.73; P = .33; adjusted analysis, HR, 0.57; P = .14). However, when compared with a cohort of patients in the United States matched by subtype, stage, age, sex, and race, patients in Botswana fared worse (1-year mortality, 22.8% v 46.3%; HR, 1.89; P = .001). Conclusion: Among patients with NHL reporting for specialty cancer care in Botswana, there is no association between HIV status and 1-year survival
HIV prevalence and change in incidence for leading cancers.
<p>Note: IP, inverse probability; 95%CI, 95% confidence interval</p><p><sup>a</sup> Quadratic term was significant for non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma among HIV-infected individuals—4.5% (95%CI -10.1 to 23.9%) per year and -9.45% (95%CI -19.5 to -1.2%) per year<sup>2</sup>.</p><p>HIV prevalence and change in incidence for leading cancers.</p
Trend in standardized incidence ratio (SIR) of cancer comparing HIV infected and HIV uninfected populations during ART expansion.
<p>Analyses utilized the IPW population. Note: ART, combination antiretroviral therapy.</p
Trends in incidence for leading cancers among HIV-infected population.
<p>Estimates from IPW population accounting for changes in overall and age-specific HIV prevalence. Shaded 95% confidence bands from 1000 bootstrap samples. Note: NHL, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma</p
Annual number of cancer diagnoses among HIV-infected and HIV-uninfected in Botswana.
<p>Analyses used the IPW population.</p