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AIDS Care
Psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of AIDS/HIV
Volume 19, 2007 - Issue 2
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Original Articles

The acceptability of a directly-administered antiretroviral therapy (DAART) intervention among patients in public HIV clinics in Los Angeles, California

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Pages 159-167 | Published online: 11 Jan 2007
 

Abstract

Directly administered antiretroviral therapy (DAART) is an intensive adherence support strategy for highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) that requires patient acceptance to be effective. In one arm of a randomized adherence study, community workers (CW) delivered and observed ingestion of one HAART dose to participants five days a week for six months. We evaluated acceptability by study participation, retention, attendance and a satisfaction survey. Chi-square and nonparametric tests were used to examine differences between participants who did and did not complete DAART. Between November 2001 and March 2004, 416 eligible participants were identified; 250 were enrolled and 166 refused to participate (22 of these (13%) because of DAART specifically). Of the 82 randomized to DAART (70% Latino, 20% African American, 27% female and 69% foreign-born), 65 (79%) completed six months of DAART. Participants attended 6,953/7,390 (94%) appointments. Latinos were more likely to complete DAART compared to African Americans (OR=4.76, 95%CI=1.38, 16.44, p=0.01). In addition, foreign-born participants were more likely to complete DAART than US-born participants (OR=3.38, 95%CI=1.11–10.22, p=0.03). Participants completing DAART reported high rates of satisfaction. Retention, attendance and participant satisfaction suggest that DAART is an acceptable adherence support strategy in this public clinic population, particularly among Latino and foreign-born participants.

Acknowledgments

This research was supported by US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Cooperative Agreement No. U64/CCU919440 and Universitywide AIDS Research Program grant CH05-LAC-617. The findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The authors would like to gratefully acknowledge the DAART staff for their contributions: Ana Ballesteros, Benjamin Iniguez and Otilia Galindo. In addition, the authors would like to recognize the following individuals for their support in the implementation of this project: Charles Henry, Elizabeth Boyce, Vicki Nagata and Matthew Harwood of the Office of AIDS Programs and Policy, Los Angeles County Department of Health Services. Finally, the authors would like to thank the study participants for their time.

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