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Patient Monitoring: Chronic HIV Care and ART Sandy Gove WHO HIV Department

Patient Monitoring: Chronic HIV Care and ART Sandy Gove WHO HIV Department. HIV Care/ART Card is on the last 2 pages of this module Patient monitoring needs to be integrated within comprehensive HIV care and ART!. Patient monitoring guidelines are based on: .

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Patient Monitoring: Chronic HIV Care and ART Sandy Gove WHO HIV Department

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  1. Patient Monitoring: Chronic HIV Care and ARTSandy Gove WHO HIV Department

  2. HIV Care/ART Card is on the last 2 pages of this module Patient monitoring needs to be integrated within comprehensive HIV care and ART!

  3. Patient monitoring guidelines are based on: • Standardized core and other data elements- agreed by WHO, CDC, USAID, PEPFAR, multiple NGOS attending a WHO Patient Monitoring meeting in March 2004 • Collecting and analyzing only what is needed for patient management and for clinic, district and national management • Allowing flexibility for additional data collection and analysis However: • Clear distinction is made between what is essential and what should be reserved for extra operational research or data summaries. • If data collection is not simple, it can be a barrier to scaling-up ART. • MORE IS NOT BETTER!

  4. TB Standardized treatment card Standardized register Globally standardized definitions Deliberately constrains data collected Based on long experience Recently, new TB-HIV indicators Disease-specific (vertical) ART/ chronic HIV care- Builds on TB experience but with key alterations Also requires a simplified disease-specific system Can pave the way or fit with similar methods for diabetes, other 'true' chronic illnesses Paper base is important for feasibility TB experience…

  5. Enrolled in HIV care and not yet eligible for ART B (Total = new + continuing) New in HIV care and not yet eligible for ART A Enrolled in HIV care and eligible for ART D (Total = new + continuing- includes those who decline ART) New in HIV care and eligible for ART C Died in preART care Lost Transferred out Non-naïve patients to ART who are not Transfer In with records Enrolled in HIV care and eligible and ready for ART E Total ever started on ART in this facility F New on ART this month G

  6. New on ART this month G Start or continue on original first-line ARV regimen H TI = Transfer In with records Add to cohort according to ART start date DEAD after starting ART TO = Transfer out LOST STOPped ART (some Restart) Substituted to alternative first-line ARV regimen I Switched to second-line (or higher) ARV regimen J

  7. HW fills out HIV care/ART card. Card defines minimal data to be collected. HW codes are on the card If switch to second line, substitutions, stop, etc.—> MO decides, consults, log book, clinician coding list- record on card Pre-ART register Monthly ART register Cohort analyses at 6,12 months then yearly— ▪ Calculate indicators for clinic use only ▪ Calculate agreed district, national, international indicators Monthly (cross-sectional) report Input to monthly drug orders if required District Regional team to MOH to AFRO, HQ, agencies

  8. Patient monitoring system Format of the card can be changed. Standardized variables and codes are what is important. • Paper system is based on 6 items: • A patient-held card • A facility-held chronic care card • HIV Care/ART Card or • Same data elements in another format • HIV Care pre-ART register • ART Register • Monthly report (updated from • Cohort analysis report • This can serve multiple needs: • Direct patient care (facilitates paradigm shift from Acute to Chronic Care) • Drug supply monitoring and preparation of facility drug orders • Data summarized and reported to meet district and national programme needs and track progress to targets (3x5; 2,7,10; etc)

  9. HIV care/ART card- adapt in country during IMAI adaptation • Agreement is being finalized on the standardized data elements • Definitions • Coding • Freedom to: • Use different formats including full patient chart • Collect additional data • Country adaptation, as clinical guidelines are adapted • If no INH prophylaxis for HIV patients, no column on card • Etc

  10. HIV Care/ART Card adaptation • Most important to standardize system nationally with allowances for collecting more data/different formats for patient cards or charts: • Number pages per patient- visit • Wide range from .05 (multiple visits on single card; extract key data) to 8 pages • Card versus multiple page chart

  11. Simplest, limit paper: Clinical review assisted by laminated form Record key treatment data and pertinent positives Other details may be in patient-held exercise book or 'patient passport' Example: IMAI; Malawi More elaborate: All positives and negatives of clinical review recorded Detailed treatment data Requires full chart What is really needed? Substantial variation in data retained on card/chart

  12. Education: HIV basics, disease progression Treatments available Support Psychosocial Disclosure Family Prevention Adherence Preparation Decide when ready- results clinical team meeting Support Problem solving HIV Care/ART Card backside in IMAI: patient education and support

  13. 2 registers: (1) Chronic HIV Care PreART When registered for HIV care Date HIV+ Entry point Start/stop dates prophylaxis- CTX, fluconazole Pregnancy, TB **When medically eligible for ART **When medically eligible and ready for ART (prepared for adherence, clinical team has met) **When ART started plus unique patient identifier Dead before ART Lost or Transfer out before ART

  14. 2 registers: (2) ART Register (incl. post-ART) • Cohorts formed in ART register (not PreART register)– by month • Date ART started, unique identity number • Why eligible 1=clinical only 2=CD4 3=TLC • At start ART: function, weight, (CD4) • Same as PreART register (transfer) • Start/stop dates prophylaxis- CTX, fluconazole • Pregnancy, TB

  15. ART register- continued • Original regimen (coded) • Substitutions within first line and switches to second line-- reason (code) and date • Months 0 to 24: • Each month: current regimen (coded) • At 6, 12 months: function, weight gain > 10%, (CD4) • Then each year: function, (CD4)

  16. Why STOP ART- reason codes 1 Toxicity/ side effects 2 Pregnancy- planned treatment interruption 3 Treatment Failure 4 Poor Adherence 5 Illness, Hospitalization 6 Drug out of Stock 7 patient lacked financial Resources 8 other patient Decision 9 planned treatment Interruption (put reason ) 10 Other

  17. Why change ARV drug or regimen 1 Toxicity/ side effects 2 Pregnancy 3 Risk of pregnancy 4 due to new TB 5 New drug available 6 Drug out of Stock 7 0ther reason (specify)_____________ Reasons for switch to 2nd-Line Regimen only: 8 Clinical treatment failure 9 Immunologic failure 10 Virologic failure

  18. Monthly report: New and cumulative ever: Enrolled in HIV care Started on ART at this facility Disaggregated by sex, pregnancy, age Transfer in (already on ART) Restart ART Patients eligible for ART but not started ARV regimens- number on Each regimen First-line Second-line Lost, Dead, Stopped, Transfer out Cohort data for last month: Median CD4: baseline, 6 and 12 mo on ART Picked up ARVs 5/6 or 10+/12 months Cohort analysis (quarterly or other periodicity) Patient status: Alive- on or off ART, regimen Dead Lost Transferred out Functional status Proportion with > 10% weight gain Proportion with CD4>200 2 registers 2 reports

  19. Cohort analysis: 6 mo, 12 mo, yearly • Proportion of patients on ART with weight gain > 10% (6, 12 mo) • Proportion working, ambulatory, bedridden • Proportion alive and on ART at 6,12 months then yearly • Proportion still on a first-line regimen • Proportion still on original first-line regimen • Proportion who have substituted to an alternative first-line regimen • Proportion switched to a second-line (or higher) regimen • Proportion of CD4 counts done which are >200 (optional) • Proportion of viral loads which are below 400 copies/ml (optional)

  20. Treatment Centre at District Hospital/HC IV Register at Health centre Clinical team RN, medical aid Nursing assistant, lay providers CO, RN CO, RN Nursing assistant, lay providers MO, MD Consult, refer, back-refer, visit Clinical team Visits by district or regional ART team/coordinator- Help with registers, reports, cohort analysis

  21. Malawi cohort and 'cumulative' analyses Cumulative- Total registered on ART since start Cohort- Number registered in that quarter • Alive and on ART • On original first-line regimen (Start) • On alternative first-line (Substituted) • On second-line regimen (Switched) • Stopped • Defaulted– ? call 'Lost' to distinguish from TB • Transferred out • Of those alive: ambulatory, at work, side effects, drug adherence >95%

  22. Malawi- logistics in managing many patients on ART • Hanging files- cards are stored sequentially • Patient held cards with number and date starting ART

  23. Matching electronic version Designed so it can enter at various steps and be interchangeable with paper • Paper card- electronic  generate register • Paper card to paper register electronic entry • Paper card to paper register to monthly report, cohort reports send or call by mobile phone  computer entry • Computer generated paper register • For 2006-2007 • For use in facilities without electronics • For back-up when computer doesn't work • Compatible Palm entry (Satellife project)

  24. Computer system centrally needed by all: • For monthly and cohort report data • To handle Transfer In and Transfer Out patients • Needs to link with drug supply

  25. Country adaptation of the card, register, report forms • Do at the same time as the adaptation of the clinical guidelines • In Ethiopia, added 7 hours to first 3 day adaptation workshop

  26. HIV Care /ART Card, pre-ART and ART registers in Uganda • First pre-tested in Masaka region (4 districts), Uganda when training 70 health workers in February 2004. • Registers introduced during post-training on-site visits in March and April 2004 • Many health workers had made up their own registers. • Used in Hoima Region (4 districts) Uganda with pretest of training materials to support use of the registers

  27. HIV Care /ART Card in Uganda • Variables in the card and registers (TB status, clinical stage, prophylaxis, FP status, ART eligibility /regimen, etc) are embedded in the 4.5 day Basic ART clinical training course. • Health workers learn the clinical care process and how to fill out the card at the same time, with exercises and practice.

  28. HIV Care /ART Card, pre-ART and ART registers training • As part of the 4.5 day Basic ART Clinical Course workshop • As 4 hour additional training for those who will do patient tracking and monitoring in the health facility • Training "refreshed" during on site post-training visits: individual training

  29. HIV Care /ART Card, pre-ART and ART registers in Masaka • Used in 18 facilities (1 Regional Hospital AIDS Clinic, 1 ART Clinic -600 patients, 4 District Hospital AIDS Clinics, 12 HC IV and III) • Slightly revised after first 4 weeks of use

  30. HIV Care /ART Card, pre-ART and ART registers in Masaka Feedback during on-site visits after training (not quantitative due to the limited number of facilities and recent introduction): • HW: Useful tool providing streamlined information Easy to fill out the card while doing the clinical review- part of the same process Easy to transfer info into the register Easy to quickly perform clinical review on the basis of data collected during previous visits • Trainers: 45 minutes needed to "refresh" on how to fill out the card and show how to use the register.

  31. HIV Care /ART Card, pre-ART and ART registers in ART Clinic, Masaka • Progressively replacing a 4 page HIV Care /ART record as ART is scaled-up from 100 to 600 patients Feedback from health workers: • HW: Useful tool providing streamlined information • Around 20 minutes per patient are saved since using this card • They like "everything on one page" – demographic, clinical and ART data

  32. District outpatient, health centre III/IV: paper card Agreed data into paper register; monthly reports, clinical team uses date Mobile phone District or regional team enters register data into computer cohort analyses, indicators Enter agreed data into palm or computer- generate monthly reports Computer generation of cohort analyses and indicators Where electronics might enter:

  33. In clinics with ART services, a more specific indicator: Numerator: Patients on ART Denominator: Patients medically eligible and ready for ART These patients have all accessed services. UNGASS indicator based on total patients receiving ART Denominator: estimated patients with AIDS (15% those infected) Number and percent of people with advanced HIV infection receiving ART

  34. Monthly analyses possible without a register or electronics • % patients with good adherence • Review reasons for fair or poor adherence • Patients with special problems • % patients referred • Identify patients for review at clinical team meetings • Patient monitoring as tool for quality improvement Card sorts, stickers, flags Motivation, needs to be satisfying and possibly fun

  35. Training materials • Training to fill out HIV Care/ART Card integrated within WHO Basic ART Clinical Training course • Module on how to fill out registers, do card sorts, monthly reports, use data- for health worker or 'professional' lay provider or HW • Module on supervising and summing monthly and cohort analysis reports (similar to TB district coordinator training module)– district coordinator

  36. Current concerns • Importance of supporting card/register with training materials • Need rapid regional review and further pretesting • Timeliness- • Programmes are starting to treat patients • Training is happening • Staff are making up cards and registers in absence of simple standards • Urgent need to address children • Draft card for further expert input

  37. Further work & national adaptation needed to deal with: • Logistic and information system to handle Transfer in/Transfer out-- with records • Add retrospectively to cohort according to when started ART • Will become an increasing proportion of patients over time, with return to work, normal mobility • Restart after treatment interruption • When is restart permitted? Different circumstances-- • Deliberate treatment interruption in first trimester pregnancy • Lost or very poor adherence- ? Restart • Adjust if planned treatment interruptions later recommended • Goes back into the same patient record (line in the register) • Number, weeks of each treatment interruption retained on card- could be used in special analyses • Non-naïve patient on ART from other sources • Goes into HIV Care PreART register (queue in rationed system)- must qualify (determine that medically eligible) and be ready

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