HIV-related disability and rehabilitation: perception of health care workers.
Lanre Ayodele OlaboyeStacey MaddocksJill Hanass-HancockVerusia ChettyPublished in: African journal of AIDS research : AJAR (2020)
Background: Health care workers play an integral role in the rehabilitation and care of people living with HIV who face multiple impairments and often disabilities. The aim of the article was to understand the perceptions and attitudes of health care workers towards caring for people living with HIV, and experiencing disability. Methods: Fifteen health care workers offering care to people living with HIV were interviewed using a semi-structured guide. These health care workers included doctors, a social worker, a pharmacist, a dietician, an occupational therapist, a physiotherapist, and nurses and HIV couPnsellors who were employed at a public health care facility in KwaZulu-Natal. Data from the interviews were transcribed and analysed using conventional content analysis. Results: Four themes emerged from semi-structured interviews with the health care workers: a holistic disability framework, a multidisciplinary team dynamic, organisational barriers and recommendations by health care workers. Conclusion: Health care workers perceived a shift from a biomedical perspective of disability to a bio-psychosocial interpretation that is influenced by contextual and environmental barriers imposed by communities on people living with HIV. Barriers included stigmatisation that leads to attitudinal barriers and social exclusion of people living with HIV and experiencing disabilities within communities. Lack of resources, including of equipment, and a shortage of health care staff also posed barriers to the care offered to people living with HIV and experiencing disabilities. Participants agreed that improved communication in the multidisciplinary health care team, as well as continuing education and training, would enable health care workers to offer improved, integrated care to people living with HIV who experience disabilities.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- quality improvement
- mental health
- palliative care
- multiple sclerosis
- human immunodeficiency virus
- south africa
- hiv infected
- affordable care act
- antiretroviral therapy
- hepatitis c virus
- primary care
- health information
- chronic pain
- pain management
- social support
- big data
- artificial intelligence
- medical education
- electronic health record
- drug induced
- virtual reality