1 / 14

Administering Adherence:

A reflective analysis examining the implementation and evaluation of HIV medication adherence programs. Administering Adherence:. Rachel L. Rees, MPA Kate Cooke, MSEd. Virginia Department of Health Washington D.C. – ADAP Technical Assistance Meeting July 16, 2009. Presentation Objectives.

horace
Télécharger la présentation

Administering Adherence:

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A reflective analysis examining the implementation and evaluation of HIV medication adherence programs Administering Adherence: Rachel L. Rees, MPA Kate Cooke, MSEd. Virginia Department of Health Washington D.C. – ADAP Technical Assistance Meeting July 16, 2009

  2. PresentationObjectives • Define the role of adherence in the treatment of HIV, both clinically and programmatically • Illustrate Virginia’s ADAP medication dispensing structure • Examine service delivery systems and communities of practice as tools to establish medication adherence programs • Discuss Virginia’s adherence initiative

  3. Defining Adherence & The Impact of (Poor) Adherence • Adherence is.. the degree to which an individual is able to follow a recommended course of treatment • Optimum treatment of HIV requires near-perfect adherence to dosing schedules* • The impact of poor adherence can result in… • Clinically • Opens the door to resistance, limiting treatment options • More complex regimens • Programmatically • Ineffective use of dollars • More expensive • Transmission of drug resistant virus (!) *Source: Bangsberg et al 2000

  4. What Degree of Adherence Is Needed? Adherence to a PI-containing regimen correlates with HIV RNA response at 3 months Patients with HIV RNA<400 copies/mL, % PI adherence, % (MEMScaps) Source: Peterson, et al. 6th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections; 1999; Chicago, IL. Abstract 92. AETC NRC Training Slide

  5. Virginia's ADAP Structure (Direct Purchase) • Drugs dispensed by Central Pharmacy (state office) • Available at any of the 135 health departments statewide, plus the Medical College of Virginia • Formulary includes over 100 medications • LHDs provide ADAP services in-kind • Eligibility and medication coordination! Active Clients by Region – September 2008 (n=2798)

  6. VA ADAP’s Service DeliveryNetwork Drops off prescription to be filled ADAP Client Local health department Picks up medications (1 – 3 days later) Submits prescriptions to be filled, ships orders back Ships order to local health department Service Delivery Networks* -------- Economic/low cost Flexible Broad geographic coverage High quality Central Pharmacy (Richmond, VA) *Source: Dawes et al, 2009

  7. From a Service Delivery System to aCommunity of Practice Communities of practice share a concern, a set of problems, or a passion about a topic, and who deepen their knowledge and expertise in this area by interacting. Source: Dawes et al, 2009

  8. VA ADAP’s Adherence Initiative Establishing Communities of Practice…. • In 2008, six individual local health departments (LHD) were selected to participate • Each LHD has varying backgrounds/experience within their ADAP staff– regionally & structurally diverse • Funded for 18 months during pilot phase • $50,000 available per funding cycle, subject to renewal

  9. Scope of Work – Program Development • Implementation of selected strategies to support treatment adherence to a designated number of ADAP clients • Participate in evaluation activities to develop best practices for ADAP clients • Submit monthly reports identifying: • Successes/Challenges • Interventions used • Clients served/units provided • Technical Assistance needed.

  10. Implemented Adherence Interventions • Client Interventions • Pill boxes • Chronic disease self management course • Referral of new ADAP clients to case manager for one-one counseling • Calendars, timers, etc… • Pre-paid cell phones with limited minutes • Reminder calls, letters, pharmacy cards, etc. • Home delivery of meds • Have clients verbalize how & when to take meds • Bus tickets System Interventions • Analyzing internal health department ADAP processing system • Medication ordering processes • Client accessibility-hours, medication refill requests • ADAP dedicated phone lines • Hiring dedicated ADAP staff member • Client satisfaction surveys • Community Partners Networking opportunities • Routine meetings with large medical partners Stakeholders are connecting to solve problems, build tools, share ideas, and set standards*… building an adherence community of practice. *Dawes et al 2009

  11. Measuring Adherence – Evaluating Success • For this project, adherence has been measured in a variety of ways (pill counting, pick-up schedule, etc.), depends on the intervention utilized • The project’s service units are reported on a monthly basis (number of interventions delivered) • Dispense logs are monitored to determine if the client is still actively participating in ADAP • Measures are evolving (!) as the program grows

  12. Opportunities for ContinuedImprovement • Each LHD ADAP functions differently—must tailor technical assistance provided • Providing on-going encouragement to highly qualified staff • Assisting the HDs to streamline 3 interventions (can be very simple, small things that are currently being done---just need to be identified) • Working with various levels of HIV/AIDS knowledge and/or ADAP understanding in the field and providing effective feedback • Reducing anxiety over submitting monthly progress reports • Reporting client listings and interventions utilized to identify service units

  13. Future Plans – Expanding the Community of Practice • Adherence Summit with Minority AIDS Initiative sites (some are dual-funded) • Discuss successes • Address challenges • Collaborate with other community partners • Identify what did not work as well in each area • Implement proven strategies in other health departments • Best practices to be compiled in a compendium to be shared statewide

  14. Thank you for your time Questions?

More Related