Interventions to Improve HIV Viral Load Suppression among the Adolescents: Evidence of Improvement Science through a Quality Improvement Approach in Eastern Uganda

Oryokot, Bonniface and Miya, Yunus and Logose, Barbara and Ajambo, Eunice and Oluka, Abraham Ignatius and Odoi, Charles and Etukoit, Bernard Michael and Mugenyi, Levicatus and Mugisha, Kenneth (2020) Interventions to Improve HIV Viral Load Suppression among the Adolescents: Evidence of Improvement Science through a Quality Improvement Approach in Eastern Uganda. World Journal of AIDS, 10 (02). pp. 94-106. ISSN 2160-8814

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Abstract

Introduction: Achieving viral load suppression among the adolescents living with HIV continues to hold back attainment of sustainable development goals. TASO Mbale realized a viral load suppression rate of 63.1% among the adolescents living with HIV in care in quarter 4 of 2016. We therefore, instituted a quality imrpovement project to improve Viral load suppression from 63.1% in quarter 4 2016 to 90% by the end of quarter 4 2017. Method: Baseline data from the Uganda viral load dashboard were analyzed, and fishbone diagram was utilized to provide root causes of low viral load suppression among the adolescents living with HIV at TASO Mbale. The identified barriers were Knowlegde gap, among the adolescents, on positive living, Missing clinic appointments, Sub-optimal adherence, Poorly planned adolescent HIV clinic, Inadequate follow-up and Low use of data for informed decisions. A plan-do-study-act (PDSA) model was applied to implement tested changes. Strategies that worked included introduction of appointment register to track appointment behaviour of the adolescents, generating lists of clients on appointment who were due for Viral Load bleeding, telephone calls for follow up, increasing the frequency of reviewing adolescents from once a month to twice a week, committing a dedicated team responsible for adolescent care. Results: The viral load suppression improved from 63.1% in quarter 4 of 2016 to 63.8% in the first quarter of 2017, to 87.5% in quarter 2 of 2017, 97.6% in the third quarter and 91.4% in quarter 4 of 2017. Conclusion: The use of quality improvement in addressing gaps in HIV service delivery is highly effective.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: OA Digital Library > Medical Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@oadigitallib.org
Date Deposited: 07 Feb 2023 10:09
Last Modified: 30 Jul 2024 06:16
URI: http://library.thepustakas.com/id/eprint/379

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