Implementing long-acting injectable antiretroviral treatments in Senegal: issues, challenges and conditions for introducing them. Qualitative study with healthcare providers and patients

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Abstract

Long-acting injectable antiretroviral therapy (LAI-ART) can offer people living with HIV (PLWH) a promising alternative to daily oral therapy. This article highlights the issues, challenges and conditions related to introducing LAI-ART into the social lives of PLWH and HIV-care practices in Senegal. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 42 PLWH in two hospital care units in Dakar and with 13 healthcare providers and 6 peer educators. Interviews were transcribed, thematically coded and analysed using a cross-sectional approach. We found three key issues. First, simplifying living with HIV: PLWH respondents perceive LAI-ART as an opportunity to ease the burden associated with taking tablets. This enthusiasm may however be qualified by an ambivalent relationship with injections and is subject to certain conditions. Second, certain constraints linked to the medicalisation of care are to be anticipated, including the obligation to go to the hospital every two months for injections. These findings foreshadow the new management work for medical follow-up expected to fall on PLWH and caregivers. Third, the challenges of introducing LAI-ART in Senegal are to ensure adequate organisation of care and supply and sustainability of the program. These results clarify how to implement programs to introduce LAI-ART into real life in the West African context.

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APA

Carillon, S., Laborde-Balen, G., Diop, M., Diop, K., Breton, G., Ndiaye, B., & Taverne, B. (2024). Implementing long-acting injectable antiretroviral treatments in Senegal: issues, challenges and conditions for introducing them. Qualitative study with healthcare providers and patients. AIDS Care - Psychological and Socio-Medical Aspects of AIDS/HIV, 36(5), 703–709. https://doi.org/10.1080/09540121.2023.2253506

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