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Using a quality improvement approach in the prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission program in Uganda improves key outcomes and is sustainable in demonstration facilities
Partnership for HIV-free survival
Flax, V. L., Kasasa, S., Ssendagire, S., Lane, C., Atuyambe, L., Lance, P. M., Ssengooba, F., Draru, J., & Bobrow, E. A. (2020). Using a quality improvement approach in the prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission program in Uganda improves key outcomes and is sustainable in demonstration facilities: Partnership for HIV-free survival. Journal of acquired immune deficiency syndromes (1999), 83(5), 457-466. https://doi.org/10.1097/qai.0000000000002298
BACKGROUND: The Partnership for HIV-Free Survival (PHFS) in Uganda used a quality improvement (QI) approach to integrate the prevention of mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) of HIV, maternal and child health, and nutrition services, with the goal of increasing the retention of mother-baby pairs in care and decreasing vertical transmission of HIV.
METHODS: This evaluation of PHFS used a retrospective longitudinal design to assess the program's association with 4 outcomes. Data were extracted from patient records from 2011 (before the program) to 2018 (after the program) at 18 demonstration, 18 scale-up, and 24 comparison facilities. Difference-in-differences analyses were conducted with significance set at P < 0.15 during and P > 0.15 or a significant continued improvement after PHFS.
RESULTS: PHFS was associated with an increase in exclusive breastfeeding (EBF) (P = 0.08), 12-month retention in care (P < 0.001), and completeness of child 18-month HIV test results (P = 0.13) at demonstration facilities during program implementation. MTCT at 18 months decreased, but did not differ between groups. Increases in EBF (P = 0.67) and retention in care (P = 0.16) were sustained, and data completeness (P = 0.10) continued to increase at demonstration facilities after the program. PHFS was associated with an increase in EBF (P < 0.001) at scale-up facilities, but there was no difference between groups for retention in care, MTCT, or data completeness. Gains in EBF were lost (P = 0.08) and retention in care declined (P < 0.001) at scale-up facilities after the program.
CONCLUSION: PHFS' quality improvement approach increased EBF, retention in care, and data completeness in demonstration facilities during the program and these benefits were sustained.