The feasibility of a community-based directly administered antiretroviral therapy program

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Abstract

Improved treatment-adherence support programs are needed to help human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected persons comply with complex highly active antiretroviral treatment (HAART) regimens. In an experimental directly administered antiretroviral therapy (DAART) program, treatment-naive and treatment-experienced persons who experienced failure of no more than 1 prior regimen were recruited from 3 public HIV/AIDS clinics in Los Angeles County. For 6 months, trained community workers observed ingestion of 1 of 2 daily HAART doses, 5 days per week, and questioned the patient about the second dose, which enabled intense adherence monitoring and real-time intervention. From November 2001 through November 2003, there were 67 DAART patients enrolled (69% Latino, 21% African American, and 9% white; 63% with annual income of

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Wohl, A. R., Garland, W. H., Squires, K., Witt, M., Larsen, R., Kovacs, A., … Weidle, P. J. (2004). The feasibility of a community-based directly administered antiretroviral therapy program. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 38(SUPPL. 5). https://doi.org/10.1086/421401

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