Barriers to tuberculosis and human immunodeficiency virus treatment guidelines adherence among nurses initiating and managing anti-retroviral therapy in KwaZulu-Natal and North West provinces
View/ Open
Date
2018Author
Makhado, Lufuno
Davhana-Maselesele, Mashudu
Farley, Jason E.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background: Nurses, as front-line care providers in the South Africa’s health care system, are
called upon to deliver integrated interventions for tuberculosis and human immunodeficiency
virus (TB and HIV) including nurse-initiated management of anti-retroviral therapy (NIMART)
and anti-TB treatment. Adherence to treatment guidelines and factors associated with nonadherence to treatment guidelines among nurses remain under explored.
Purpose: To explore and describe barriers to treatment guidelines adherence among nurses
initiating and managing anti-retroviral therapy and anti-TB treatment in KwaZulu-Natal and
North West provinces.
Design: This study employed a qualitative exploratory descriptive design.
Methods: Four semi-structured focus group interviews were conducted during 2014 each
consisting of four to eight NIMART trained nurses. Audiotaped interviews were transcribed
verbatim and analysed using Atlas T.I. software.
Findings: During data analysis, two themes emerged: (1) NIMART trained nurses’ distress
about TB and HIV guidelines adherence that is inclusive of lack of agreement with guidelines,
poor motivation to implement guidelines, poor clinical support and supervision, resistance to
change, insufficient knowledge or lack of awareness and (2) exterior factors inhibiting nurses’
adherence to treatment guidelines which incorporated organisational factors, guidelinesrelated factors and patient-related factors.
Conclusion: This qualitative study identified that nurses have substantial concerns over
guideline adherence. If NIMART trained nurses’ barriers inhibiting adherence to treatment
guidelines cannot be remedied, patient outcomes may suffer and South Africa will struggle to
meet the 90-90-90 targets
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10394/32896https://curationis.org.za/index.php/curationis/article/view/1808/2234
https://doi.org/10.4102/curationis.v41i1.1808
Collections
- Faculty of Health Sciences [2404]