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Contemporary disengagement from antiretroviral therapy in Khayelitsha, South Africa: A cohort study.

Samantha R KaplanChrista OosthuizenKathryn StinsonFrancesca LittleJonathan EuvrardMichael SchomakerMeg OslerKatherine HilderbrandAndrew BoulleGraeme Meintjes
Published in: PLoS medicine (2017)
Twenty-three percent of ART patients in the large cohort of Khayelitsha, one of the oldest public-sector ART programs in South Africa, disengaged from care at least once in a contemporary 2-year period. Fifty-eight percent of these patients either subsequently returned to care (some "silently") or remained alive without hospitalization, suggesting that many who are considered "lost" actually return to care, and that misclassification of "lost" patients is likely common in similar urban populations. A challenge to meeting ART retention targets is developing, testing, and implementing program designs to target mobile populations and retain them in lifelong care. This should be guided by risk factors for disengagement and improving interlinkage of routine information systems to better support patient care across complex care platforms.
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