A 17 year experience of attrition from care among HIV infected children in Nnewi South-East Nigeria
Abstract Background A large number of HIV-infected children continue to die despite reported scale-up of paediatric HIV services. Aim The trend in attrition among children enrolled in an anti-retroviral therapy (ART) programme was evaluated. Methods This was a retrospective review of children enroll...
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doaj-7343a705ae7f49e89be6fb26d244fe0f2021-05-09T11:08:18ZengBMCBMC Infectious Diseases1471-23342021-05-0121111110.1186/s12879-021-06099-3A 17 year experience of attrition from care among HIV infected children in Nnewi South-East NigeriaChinyere Ukamaka Onubogu0Ebelechuku Francesca Ugochukwu1Department of Paediatrics, Faculty of Medicine, Nnamdi Azikiwe UniversityDepartment of Paediatrics, Faculty of Medicine, Nnamdi Azikiwe UniversityAbstract Background A large number of HIV-infected children continue to die despite reported scale-up of paediatric HIV services. Aim The trend in attrition among children enrolled in an anti-retroviral therapy (ART) programme was evaluated. Methods This was a retrospective review of children enrolled into NAUTH ART programme between 2003 and 2019. Results 1114 children < 15 years at enrolment were studied. The male: female ratio was 1:1 while median age at enrolment was 4.3 years. About two-thirds had WHO stage 3 or 4 disease at enrolment. The rate of loss to follow-up (LTFU) and death were 41.0 and 8.4%, respectively, with overall attrition incidence of 108/1000PY. Despite the downward trend, spikes occurred among those enrolled in 2008 to 2011 and in 2017. The trend in 6-, 12-, 24- and 36-months attrition varied similarly with overall rates being 20.4, 27.7, 34.3 and 37.3%, respectively. Among those on ART, > 50% of attrition was recorded within 6 months of care. Advanced WHO stage, young age, non-initiation on ART or period of enrolment (P < 0.001), and caregiver (p = 0.026) were associated with attrition in bivariate analysis. Apart from caregiver category, these factors remained significant in multivariate analysis. Most LTFU could not be reached on phone. Among those contacted, common reasons for being lost to follow-up were financial constraints, caregiver loss, claim to divine healing, family disharmony/child custody issues and relocation of family/child. Conclusion/recommendation Attrition rate was high and was mostly due to LTFU. Predictors of attrition were late presentation, young age, delay in ART initiation and financial constraints. Efforts should be intensified at early diagnosis, linkage to care and implementation of “test and treat” strategy. Innovative child centered approaches should be adopted to enable the HIV-infected children remain in care despite challenges which can truncate treatment.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-021-06099-3Childhood HIVRetention in careDeathLoss to follow-upSub-Saharan Africa |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Chinyere Ukamaka Onubogu Ebelechuku Francesca Ugochukwu |
spellingShingle |
Chinyere Ukamaka Onubogu Ebelechuku Francesca Ugochukwu A 17 year experience of attrition from care among HIV infected children in Nnewi South-East Nigeria BMC Infectious Diseases Childhood HIV Retention in care Death Loss to follow-up Sub-Saharan Africa |
author_facet |
Chinyere Ukamaka Onubogu Ebelechuku Francesca Ugochukwu |
author_sort |
Chinyere Ukamaka Onubogu |
title |
A 17 year experience of attrition from care among HIV infected children in Nnewi South-East Nigeria |
title_short |
A 17 year experience of attrition from care among HIV infected children in Nnewi South-East Nigeria |
title_full |
A 17 year experience of attrition from care among HIV infected children in Nnewi South-East Nigeria |
title_fullStr |
A 17 year experience of attrition from care among HIV infected children in Nnewi South-East Nigeria |
title_full_unstemmed |
A 17 year experience of attrition from care among HIV infected children in Nnewi South-East Nigeria |
title_sort |
17 year experience of attrition from care among hiv infected children in nnewi south-east nigeria |
publisher |
BMC |
series |
BMC Infectious Diseases |
issn |
1471-2334 |
publishDate |
2021-05-01 |
description |
Abstract Background A large number of HIV-infected children continue to die despite reported scale-up of paediatric HIV services. Aim The trend in attrition among children enrolled in an anti-retroviral therapy (ART) programme was evaluated. Methods This was a retrospective review of children enrolled into NAUTH ART programme between 2003 and 2019. Results 1114 children < 15 years at enrolment were studied. The male: female ratio was 1:1 while median age at enrolment was 4.3 years. About two-thirds had WHO stage 3 or 4 disease at enrolment. The rate of loss to follow-up (LTFU) and death were 41.0 and 8.4%, respectively, with overall attrition incidence of 108/1000PY. Despite the downward trend, spikes occurred among those enrolled in 2008 to 2011 and in 2017. The trend in 6-, 12-, 24- and 36-months attrition varied similarly with overall rates being 20.4, 27.7, 34.3 and 37.3%, respectively. Among those on ART, > 50% of attrition was recorded within 6 months of care. Advanced WHO stage, young age, non-initiation on ART or period of enrolment (P < 0.001), and caregiver (p = 0.026) were associated with attrition in bivariate analysis. Apart from caregiver category, these factors remained significant in multivariate analysis. Most LTFU could not be reached on phone. Among those contacted, common reasons for being lost to follow-up were financial constraints, caregiver loss, claim to divine healing, family disharmony/child custody issues and relocation of family/child. Conclusion/recommendation Attrition rate was high and was mostly due to LTFU. Predictors of attrition were late presentation, young age, delay in ART initiation and financial constraints. Efforts should be intensified at early diagnosis, linkage to care and implementation of “test and treat” strategy. Innovative child centered approaches should be adopted to enable the HIV-infected children remain in care despite challenges which can truncate treatment. |
topic |
Childhood HIV Retention in care Death Loss to follow-up Sub-Saharan Africa |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-021-06099-3 |
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