The Rapid interaction: A qualitative study of provider approaches to implementing Rapid ART
Creators
- 1. University of California, San Francisco
- 2. Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital
- 3. Howard Brown Health Center
- 4. University of Chicago
- 5. San Francisco AIDS Foundation
Description
Background: Offering antiretroviral therapy (ART) to patients directly following an HIV diagnosis ("Rapid ART") improves clinical outcomes and is feasible and acceptable for patients and providers. Despite this, implementation of Rapid ART is not yet standard practice in the USA. Structural-level implementation guidance is available, but research at the individual provider level that explores the patient-provider interaction itself remains scarce. The Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) provides a nuanced guide to investigating the less visible, more social elements of implementation like the knowledge and feelings of people, and the influences of culture and resources on individual approaches.
Methods: We conducted a multi-site qualitative study, exploring intervention commonalities across three HIV clinic environments: an HIV primary care clinic; an HIV/STI testing, treatment, and prevention clinic; and a large federally qualified health center (FQHC). Qualitative data were gathered from 27 provider informants-Rapid ART program staff and clinicians-using an interview guide developed using the CFIR. An experienced qualitative team conducted a comprehensive thematic analysis and identified cross-cutting themes in how providers approach and engage in the Rapid interaction, as well as longer-form narratives from providers that describe more fully what this interaction looks like for them.
Results: Three main themes represent the range and content of individual provider approaches to the Rapid interaction: (1) patient-centeredness; (2) emotional support and partnership; and (3) correcting misperceptions about HIV. Each theme encompassed both conceptual approaches to offering Rapid ART and concrete examples of messaging to the patient that providers used in the Rapid interaction. We describe and show examples of these themes, offer key take-aways for implementation, and provide expanded narratives of providers' personal approaches to the Rapid interaction.
Conclusions: Exploration of provider-level approaches to Rapid ART implementation, as carried out in the patient-provider Rapid interaction, contributes a critical layer of evidence for wider implementation. It is our hope that, together with existing research showing positive outcomes and core components of systems-level implementation, these findings add to an instructive body of findings that facilitates the implementation of Rapid ART as an enhanced model of HIV care.
Data availability
The datasets generated and analyzed during the current study are not publicly available due to their potential for participant identification, but portions may be made available by the corresponding author upon reasonable request. We are not able to share this complete dataset more broadly without compromising participant confidentiality. Even within large institutions, these Rapid ART teams are quite small and often have only one or just a few individuals in each role. Several elements of each interview—be them contextual, references to job duties or roles, speech patterns and idioms, or elements we may not be able to anticipate or identify—could reveal the identity of the informant with a likelihood that makes it our responsibility to avoid. Furthermore, making the full content of these interviews publicly available is beyond the scope of data use to which participants consented.Files
Rapid-interaction-A-qualitative-study-of-provider-approaches-to-implementing-Rapid-ART.pdf
Files
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Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1186/s43058-023-00464-w
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:6744
Funding
- University of California
- California HIV/AIDS Research Program
- Gilead Sciences