Patient and health-care worker experiences of an HIV viral load intervention using SMS: A qualitative study

Background Mobile Health or mHealth interventions, including Short Message Service (SMS), can help increase access to care, enhance the efficiency of health service delivery and improve diagnosis and treatment for HIV. Text messaging, or SMS, allows for the low cost transmission of information, and has been used to send appointment reminders, information about HIV counselling and treatment, messages to encourage adherence and information on nutrition and side-effects. HIV Viral Load (VL) monitoring is recommended by the WHO and has been progressively adopted in many settings. In Zimbabwe, implementation of VL is routine and has been rolled out with support of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) since 2012. An SMS intervention to assist with the management of VL results was introduced in two rural districts of Zimbabwe. After completion of the HIV VL testing at the National Microbiology Reference Laboratory in Harare, results were sent to health facilities via SMS. Consenting patients were also sent an SMS informing them that their viral load results were ready for collection at their nearest health facilities. No actual VL results were sent to patients. Methods A qualitative study was conducted in seven health-care facilities using in-depth interviews (n = 32) and focus group discussions (n = 5) to explore patient and health-care worker experiences of the SMS intervention. Purposive sampling was used to select participants to ensure that male and female patients, as well as those with differing VL results and who lived differing distances from the clinics were included. Data were transcribed, translated from Shona into English, coded and thematically analysed using NVivo software. Results The VL SMS intervention was considered acceptable to patients and health-care workers despite some challenges in implementation. The intervention was perceived by health-care workers as improving adherence and well-being of patients as well as improving the management of VL results at health facilities. However, there were some concerns from participants about the intervention, including challenges in understanding the purpose and language of the messages and patients coming to their health facility unnecessarily. Health-care workers were more concerned than patients about unintentional HIV disclosure relating to the content of the messages or phone-sharing. Conclusion This was an innovative intervention in Zimbabwe, in which SMS was used to send VL results to health-care facilities, and notifications of the availability of VL results to patients. Interventions such as this have the potential to reduce unnecessary clinic visits and ensure patients with high VL results receive timely support, but they need to be properly explained, alongside routine counselling, for patients to fully benefit. The findings of this study also have potential policy implications, as if implemented well, such an SMS intervention has the potential to help patients adopt a more active role in the self-management of their HIV disease, become more aware of the importance of adherence and VL monitoring and seek follow-up at clinics when results are high.

[1]  Quentin Eichbaum,et al.  Exploring the patterns of use and the feasibility of using cellular phones for clinic appointment reminders and adherence messages in an antiretroviral treatment clinic, Durban, South Africa. , 2010, AIDS patient care and STDs.

[2]  P. Ashorn,et al.  ‘The phone reminder is important, but will others get to know about my illness?’ Patient perceptions of an mHealth antiretroviral treatment support intervention in the HIVIND trial in South India , 2015, BMJ Open.

[3]  M. Välimäki,et al.  Use of Mobile Phone Text Message Reminders in Health Care Services: A Narrative Literature Review , 2014, Journal of medical Internet research.

[4]  O. Uthman,et al.  Acceptability and feasibility of mHealth and community-based directly observed antiretroviral therapy to prevent mother-to-child HIV transmission in South African pregnant women under Option B+: an exploratory study , 2016, Patient preference and adherence.

[5]  C. Adams,et al.  Information and communication technology based prompting for treatment compliance for people with serious mental illness. , 2014, The Cochrane database of systematic reviews.

[6]  Asha M. George,et al.  Assessing Scale-Up of mHealth Innovations Based on Intervention Complexity: Two Case Studies of Child Health Programs in Malawi and Zambia , 2015, Journal of health communication.

[7]  H. Bygrave,et al.  Designing text-messaging (SMS) in HIV programs: ethics-framed recommendations from the field , 2015, The Pan African medical journal.

[8]  A. Haines,et al.  The Effectiveness of Mobile-Health Technology-Based Health Behaviour Change or Disease Management Interventions for Health Care Consumers: A Systematic Review , 2013, PLoS medicine.

[9]  Merrick Schaefer,et al.  Early infant diagnosis of HIV infection in Zambia through mobile phone texting of blood test results. , 2012, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

[10]  Patricia Mechael,et al.  Barriers and Gaps Affecting mHealth in Low and Middle Income Countries: Policy White Paper , 1970 .

[11]  E. Szumilin,et al.  Benefit of viral load testing for confirmation of immunological failure in HIV patients treated in rural Malawi , 2011, Tropical medicine & international health : TM & IH.

[12]  U. Unicef,et al.  Global HIV/AIDS response: epidemic update and health sector progress towards universal access: progress report 2011. , 2011 .

[13]  V. Chongsuvivatwong,et al.  Effects of a Phone Call Intervention to Promote Adherence to Antiretroviral Therapy and Quality of Life of HIV/AIDS Patients in Baoshan, China: A Randomized Controlled Trial , 2013, AIDS research and treatment.

[14]  William Brown,et al.  Are participants concerned about privacy and security when using short message service to report product adherence in a rectal microbicide trial? , 2018, J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc..