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Community-Based Model for Delivery of Antiretroviral Therapy in Cambodia

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
AIDS
HIV Infections
Interventions
Other: ART multi-month dispensing (MMD)
Other: Community-based ART delivery (CAD)
Registration Number
NCT04766710
Lead Sponsor
National University of Singapore
Brief Summary

The community-based ART delivery (CAD) model will build on the existing framework to engage community action, operationalized in the current Global Fund-supported project. Community Action Workers (CAW), who are assigned to ART centers and conduct outreach work, are well-suited to administer CAD scheme. KHANA and the project partners all have implementation roles in the Global Fund-supported project and established working channels with the CAW.

While the previous experiences suggest the CAD model's effectiveness, implementing it in Cambodia requires adaptation to its specific local context. The proposed project will be implemented as an implementation study in nine ART sites and supported by a concrete evaluation plan. KHANA Center for Population Health Research will lead the research component.

The project has three strategic areas and corresponding deliverables as follows:

A. The development of a locally-fitted model: bringing ART closer to the people living with HIV B. The research: formulation, evaluation, documentation, and dissemination of the evidence, knowledge, and lessons learned C. The scale-up: advocacy for the SOP development to replicate/scale-up the CAD model

The project will benefit a wide range of stakeholders. The approximately 2,000 ART clients enrolled in the nine selected clinics will face less cost, time, and discrimination, which will also benefit their families. The clinics will have a reduced workload on site, and they would be able to improve the quality of care for the visiting clients. The Cambodian health system will obtain a CAD model tailored to the country's local context and develop Standard Operating Procedures for the scheme with readily involved stakeholders. The scale-up of the model will benefit all other ART clinics and clients in the country.

The 36-months project starting from June 1, 2019, will include six months of start-up and baseline assessments, 24-month intervention, and six-month evaluation.

Detailed Description

One of the challenges in the Cambodian HIV response is the relatively low rate of retention in care and viral load suppression among people living with HIV on ART. According to a report from the National Center for HIV/AIDS, Dermatology and STD (NCHADS), by the end of September 2017, approximately 98% (n= 58,268) of people living with HIV diagnosed in the whole country were initiated on ART. Of them, 75% were virally suppressed, and 89% were retained on the treatment 12 months after the treatment initiation. Similarly, a recent study conducted by KHANA Center for Population Research in 11 ART clinics across the country found that the rate of viral suppression among adolescents living with HIV aged 15-17 was 76.8%.

To date, ART in Cambodia has been administered only at the government ART clinics. Nationally, there are 66 ART Clinics in 22 of the 25 provinces. Making a trip to an ART clinic on a monthly or bimonthly basis to receive repeated prescriptions poses a heavy burden on the clients in terms of both time and money. Besides, as the Global Fund Funding Request points out (pp.7-8), besides self-stigma, people living with HIV and key populations continue to face stigma and discrimination in their communities, in accessing health and other services, and at the household level. Furthermore, under the current scheme, the necessity for the ART clinics to meet the demand of all of the ART clients, including the stable clients who visit bi-monthly, is a huge burden on the facilities and the service providers. Fewer client visits per given timeframe are expected to help the health workers spend more time per visiting client and improve the service quality.

Community-based service delivery has been an integral part of the response to HIV in other parts of the world. Cambodia's national HIV program acknowledges the major contribution of such an approach, including the proposed CAD model. In 2016, the World Health Organization (WHO) recommended that stable ART clients can safely reduce the frequency of clinic visits, potentially receiving ART in community settings. Researches from other contexts have also suggested that communities can be engaged to provide ART with good outcomes. Most CAD models have been demonstrated to reduce burdens for patients and the health systems, increased retention in care, and lower service provider costs. KHANA and its partners, including NCHADS, believe that an adaptation of an ART delivery model that meaningfully includes community-based services will be essential, particularly as the national program intensifies case-finding and the "Treat All" approach, to meet the national targets.

KHANA has been a leader of the country's community-led HIV response and was one of the key members in developing the "Consolidated Operational Framework on Community Action Approach to Implement B-IACM towards achieving 90-90-90 in Cambodia (Community Action Framework)" of NCHADS. For the past 20 years, KHANA has supported the capacity building of the HIV-affected communities, who now bring invaluable contributions to the design of the HIV response in Cambodia. The Community Action Framework aims to ensure the continued participation of the communities, thus strengthening the health system and empowering the HIV-affected communities. The current Global Fund-supported project applies this framework to detect undiagnosed people living with HIV by promoting HIV testing and counseling in the communities and improve the HIV care cascade. KHANA sees an opportunity to extend this framework's application in the form of CAD with the support of the 5% Initiative.

The Community Action Framework has a section on CAD; however, there is a need to operationalize this model and demonstrating its applicability in the Cambodian context. The proposed project will develop a CAD model considering the evidence and findings of previous studies, the Cambodian local context, and the principles set by the national HIV program. As an operational research project, it will be implemented to reach approximately 2,000 people living with HIV who are categorized as 'stable' (on ART for 12 months or more, clinically stable, undetectable viral load) in nine selected ART clinics, five urban and four rural, in the five provinces. In total, 82 community-based ART groups will be established, with approximately 25 members in each group. The designated CAW will coordinate the groups with technical support from five project assistants, one per province.

In the architecture of the current Global Fund-supported project, the Community-Based Prevention, Care and Support (CBPCS) are implemented for people living with HIV in greatest needs and other target populations by civil society organization (CSO) workers at the ART clinics; i.e., Community Action Counsellors (CAC), Facility-Based Workers (FBW) and CAW. They will contribute to the daily facility activities and perform outreach work as needed. CAWs are assigned to 37 ART sites, and their responsibilities will include: a) provision of case management and support for people living with HIV in greatest needs (e.g., people living with HIV who are newly enrolled in ART, pregnant women, children under five years and adolescents) to improve drug adherence, missed appointment issues or treatment failure and b) being in contact with Village Health Support Groups (VHSG) to encourage HIV testing and counseling and trace new cases. The administration of CAD fits well in the function of CAW.

The project is strategized around three key areas as follows:

1. Bringing ART closer to the people living with HIV This innovative CAD model's main concept is that the community-based ART provision brings the treatment to come closer to people living with HIV. It is made possible by CAW who bring pre-packed ARV refill and various support services to the members of Community ART Groups. A technology-based tool using tablets will be introduced to the CAW as educational materials and monitoring tools.

Accessibility of ARV distribution points is crucial to the success of this scheme. Therefore, the distribution points will be located at the monthly meeting sites of the local self-help groups. Stable ART clients who are members of the scheme will visit the designated ART clinic for consultation and viral load monitoring every six months. The project will also work to reactivate the existing savings initiative within such self-help groups to contribute to such community groups' sustainability.

Linkages with the designated ART clinics will be strengthened through capacity-building activities, coaching, and mentoring. Training will be provided to the relevant ART clinic staff members on the new CAD model's overall objectives and on the roles they will play in the project implementation.

Gender, age, and populations are parameters that are expected to determine the effectiveness of the model significantly. The project will have mixed-gender groups and population-specific groups (e.g., male, female, transgender women, men who have sex with men). The project design will also consider the special needs of different population groups such as female entertainment workers (FEWs) and lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and intersex (LGBTI) more broadly.

2. Evaluation, documentation, and dissemination of the project findings and lessons learned

The project will provide an opportunity to generate various program findings, evidence and lessons learned, which will be documented and disseminated through:

* Routine data collection for project monitoring and harmonization with/integration into the B-IACM approach and national ART database system.

* Case study documentation per site and comparative analyses.

* Presentations at national HIV/AIDS Technical Working Group meetings to support knowledge sharing and replication of the model.

* Dissemination of the findings nationally to the Ministry of Health and other national and international stakeholders to inform evidence-based policy dialogues.

* Presentations at national, regional, and international scientific conferences.

* Operational reports and international peer-reviewed publications.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
4102
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
ART multi-month dispensing (MMD)ART multi-month dispensing (MMD)A total of 2000 registered stable people living with HIV will form into the control group and received standard services under the MDD model. The control-arm participants will visit the ART clinics and collect their ARVs from the facility-based staff.
Community-based ART delivery (CAD)Community-based ART delivery (CAD)The CAD model intervention will take place for 24 months. A total of 2000 registered stable people living with HIV will form into the CAD group. The investigators have developed the implementation guide, monitoring tools, quality assurance checklist, and lists of people living with HIV in selected ART clinics for the CAD model intervention. The first step will be to extract the data disaggregated by gender, age, and type of sub-populations, including adolescents, female entertainment workers, men who have sex with men, transgender women, and people who use drugs from the national database using the definitions introduced by the WHO. Once the list is completed with patient ART codes, a consultative meeting combined with the project orientation will be convened. Providers from the selected ART clinics and implementing partners at each site will divide stable people living with HIV into their respective groups based on the ART sites.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Percent of people living with HIV who remained in HIV care and treatment24 months after the intervention started

At least 90% of participants in the intervention will be retained in care and treatment 12 months after the treatment started

Percent of people living with HIV with viral suppression24 months after the intervention started

Viral load At least 90% of participants in intervention arm will have a viral load \<1000 RNA copies/mL by the endline of the intervention

Percent of people living with HIV with good adherence to ART24 months after the intervention started

At least 90% of the participants in the intervention will report good adherence to ART at the endline.

Percent of healthcare providers at ART clinics who reported reduced workload24 months after the intervention started

Workload at ART clinics will be self-reported by health care workers providing ART services at the clinics. The investigators hypothesize that a significantly higher proportion of health care providers at ART clinics under the CAD intervention arm will agree that their workload has been reduced at endline compared to baseline.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Percent of people living with HIV who reported improved quality of life24 months after the intervention started

The quality of life of people living with HIV will be measured using WHO's Quality of Life HIV brief questionnaire (WHOQOL-HIV-BREF). The scale's domain score ranges from 4 to 20. Higher scores indicate a better quality of life. The investigators hypothesized that the proportion of people living with HIV who reported a higher quality of life would increase more significantly from baseline to endline among participants in the community-based ART delivery (CAD) intervention arm than those in the control arm.

Percent of people living with HIV who reported improved social support health24 months after the intervention started

Social support for people living with HIV will be measured using Berlin Social Support Scale (BSSS). The BSSS's total score ranges from 15 to 60, with higher scores indicating higher social support. The investigators hypothesized that the proportion of people living with HIV who perceived a high social support level would increase more significantly from baseline to endline among participants in the community-based ART delivery (CAD) intervention arm than those in the control arm.

Percent of people living with HIV who reported improved mental health24 months after the intervention started

The mental health of people living with HIV will be measured using the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D). The total CES-D score ranges from 0 to 60. A subject with a CES-D score of ≥16 will be defined as having depressive symptoms. The investigators hypothesized that the proportion of people living with HIV who reported having depressive symptoms would decrease more significantly from baseline to endline among participants in the community-based ART delivery (CAD) intervention arm than in the control arm.

Cost-effectiveness of community-based ART delivery (CAD) model intervention24 months after the intervention started

For the cost-effectiveness analyses, direct and indirect medical costs for follow-up care and ARV refills will be collected. The costs in this community-based ART delivery intervention will be compared with the costs in standard care services (facility-based and multi-month dispensing model). The investigators anticipated that the community-based ART delivery intervention will be similar in all intervention and service delivery models. However, CAD model will help save time and costs of people living with HIV in the intervention arm.

Trial Locations

Locations (3)

KHANA Center for Population Health Research

🇰🇭

Phnom Penh, Cambodia

Cambodia Anti-Tuberculosis Association

🇰🇭

Phnom Penh, Cambodia

National Center for Tuberculosis and Leprosy Control

🇰🇭

Phnom Penh, Cambodia

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