2020
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0228148
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Optimizing differentiated treatment models for people living with HIV in urban Zimbabwe: Findings from a mixed methods study

Abstract: Introduction Zimbabwe is scaling up HIV differentiated service delivery (DSD) to improve treatment outcomes and health system efficiencies. Shifting stable patients into less-intensive DSD models is a high priority in order to accommodate the large numbers of newly-diagnosed people living with HIV (PLHIV) needing treatment and to provide healthcare workers with the time and space needed to treat people with advanced HIV disease. DSD is also seen as a way to improve service quality and enhance retention in care… Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(77 citation statements)
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“…1d); in the three choice experiments which evaluated three versus five or six monthly refills, ART refill frequency ranked lower than provider attitude in all, and additionally ranked lower than opening hours, waiting time, and group or individual counseling services in two (Fig. 1e) [24].…”
Section: Plwh Do Not Want To Receive 1 Monthly Art Refills and Appearmentioning
confidence: 93%
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“…1d); in the three choice experiments which evaluated three versus five or six monthly refills, ART refill frequency ranked lower than provider attitude in all, and additionally ranked lower than opening hours, waiting time, and group or individual counseling services in two (Fig. 1e) [24].…”
Section: Plwh Do Not Want To Receive 1 Monthly Art Refills and Appearmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Data collection was similarly well described, and mode of administration of the experiment (cards, paper forms, electronic tools) was reported in all but one study [21]. Five studies either used the sample size estimation based on the formula N ≥ (500 × c)/(a × t) [28]where N is the number of participants, t is the number of choice tasks, a is the number of alternative scenarios, and c is the largest number of attribute levels for any one attribute [23][24][25][26]-or followed the proposed rule of 300 or more participants and 200 per sub-group [21]. Three studies did not present sample size calculations [18][19][20], but these studies had samples of over 1000 participants which may have been sufficient to estimate effects and accommodate sub-grouping and interactions.…”
Section: Methodological Quality Of Included Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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