• African health sciences · Sep 2017

    Patients' perceptions of a rural decentralised anti-retroviral therapy management and its impact on direct out-of-pocket spending.

    • Monique Lines and Fatima Suleman.
    • Postgraduate Student, Discipline of Pharmaceutical Sciences, School of Health Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal.
    • Afr Health Sci. 2017 Sep 1; 17 (3): 746752746-752.

    BackgroundGeographical and financial barriers hamper accessibility to HIV services for rural communities. The government has introduced the nurse initiated management of anti-retroviral therapy at primary health care level, in an effort to improve patient access and reduce patient loads on facilities further up the system.ObjectivesTo ascertain the perceptions and satisfaction of patients in terms of the decentralised anti-retroviral policy and the direct out-of-pocket expenses of patients accessing this care in a rural setting.MethodUsing a cross-sectional study design, 117 patients from five different primary health care collection points and a hospital anti-retroviral clinic were interviewed using a standard questionnaire.ResultsMore clinic patients walked to their clinic to collect their medicines as compared to hospital patients (71.2% versus 14.6%). Hospital patients spent more than clinic patients on monthly transport costs (ZAR71.92 versus ZAR25.81, Anova F=12.42, p=0.0009). All clinic patients listed their respective clinic as their preferred medicine collection point despite recording lower levels of satisfaction with anti-retroviral services (89% compared to 95.5%).ConclusionPatients seem to indicate that they preferred decentralisation of HIV care to PHC level and that this might minimise out-of-pocket spending. Further studies are required to confirm these findings.

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