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Patient and provider perspectives on implementation barriers and facilitators of an integrated opioid treatment and HIV care intervention.

Alexis CookeHaneefa SaleemSaria HassanDorothy MushiJessie MbwamboBarrot Lambdin
Published in: Addiction science & clinical practice (2019)
Understanding the contextual factors that influence implementation is critical to the success of interventions that seek to integrate HIV services into existing programs for key populations such as PWUD. Approximately 4 months after IMAT implementation, the OTP clinic adopted a 'test-and-treat' model for HIV-positive PWUD, which significantly impacted clinic workload as well as the care context. In this study we highlight the importance of intervention characteristics and resources, as key facilitators and barriers to implementation, that should be actively integrated into intervention protocols to increase implementation success. Similar interventions in other low-resource settings should address the ways intervention characteristics and contextual factors, such as adaptability, complexity and available resources impact implementation in specific care contexts.
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