Understanding the persistence of vertical (stand-alone) HIV clinics in the health system in Uganda: a qualitative synthesis of patient and provider perspectives
Date
2018-09-05
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer nature: BMC Health Services Research.
Abstract
Although there is mounting evidence and policy guidance urging the integration of HIV services into
general health systems in countries with a high HIV burden, vertical (stand-alone) HIV clinics are still common in
Uganda. We sought to describe the specific contexts underpinning the endurance of vertical HIV clinics in Uganda.
Methods: A qualitative research design was adopted. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with the heads of
HIV clinics, clinicians and facility in-charges (n = 78), coupled with eight focus group discussions (64 participants)
with patients from 16 health facilities purposively selected, from a nationally-representative sample of 195 health
facilities across Uganda, because they run stand-alone HIV clinics. Data were analyzed by thematic approach as
guided by the theory proposed by Shediac-Rizkallah & Bone (1998) which identifies; Intervention characteristics,
organizational context, and broader environment factors as potentially influential on health programme sustainability.
Results: Intervention characteristics: Provider stigma was reported to have been widespread in the integrated care
experience of participating health facilities which necessitated the establishment of stand-alone HIV clinics. HIV
disease management was described as highly specialized which necessitated a dedicated workforce and vertical HIV
infrastructure such as counselling rooms. Organizational context: Participating health facilities reported health-system
capacity constraints in implementing integrated systems of care due to a shortage of ART-proficient personnel and
physical space, a lack of laboratory capacity to concurrently conduct HIV and non-HIV tests and increased workloads
associated with implementing integrated care. Broader environment factors: Escalating HIV client loads and external HIV
funding architectures were perceived to have perpetuated verticalized HIV programming over the past decade.
Conclusion: Our study offers in-depth, contextualized insights into the factors contributing to the endurance of
vertical HIV clinics in Uganda. Our analysis suggests that there is a complex interaction in supply-side constraints
(shortage of ART-proficient personnel, increased workloads, laboratory capacity deficiencies) and demand-side
factors (escalating demand for HIV services, psychosocial barriers to HIV care) as well as the specialized nature of
HIV disease management which pose challenges to the integrated-health services agenda.
Description
13 p.
Keywords
Health systems, Service delivery, HIV, Implementation research, Antiretroviral therapy, Integration, Global health initiatives.
Citation
Zakumumpa, Henry (2018). Understanding the persistence of vertical (stand-alone) HIV clinics in the health system in Uganda: a qualitative synthesis of patient and provider perspectives. Springer nature: BMC Health Services Research.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-018-3500-4.