ABSTRACT
Objective: People who inject drugs (PWIDs) are highly vulnerable to acquiring HIV infection. Existing interventions have not succeeded in linking PWIDs to antiretroviral treatment (ART). Structural interventions (SIs) or public health interventions that alter the structural context need investigation for a suitable linking to care (LIC) strategy.
Methods: We conducted in-depth interviews with 31 HIV-infected PWIDs. Using a thematic approach, interviews were stopped on reaching saturation of themes.
Results: Personal barriers like denial of HIV status, fatalistic attitude, inability to find time because of earning livelihood, or money for their drugs, transportation difficulties and hospital level barriers like time required for registration, crowd at the hospital, and difficulty traversing departments dissuaded LTC. Using social networks, drug peddlers or provision through mobile health units were accepted as feasible alternatives.
Conclusion: PWIDs face various barriers to LTC. SIs are required for LTC of PWIDs. Storytelling for educational campaign, mobile health units at hot spots to provide HIV test and ART, and using social networks and drug peddlers to assist with education and LTC are suggested.
Practice implications: Existing interventions have not succeeded in reducing HIV prevalence as well as linking to ART care. New SI interventions need to be experimented for LTC.
Abbreviations: AIDS: autoimmune deficiency syndrome; ART: antiretroviral treatment; HIV: human immunodeficiency virus; LTC: linking to care; PWID: people who inject drugs; SI: structural Interventions; TB: htuberculosis Bacillus infection
Disclosure of potential conflicts of interest
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.