The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Population impacts of conditional financial incentives and a male-targeted digital decision support application on the HIV treatment cascade in rural KwaZulu-Natal: Findings from the HITS cluster randomized clinical trial

Population impacts of conditional financial incentives and a male-targeted digital decision support application on the HIV treatment cascade in rural KwaZulu-Natal: Findings from the HITS cluster randomized clinical trial
Population impacts of conditional financial incentives and a male-targeted digital decision support application on the HIV treatment cascade in rural KwaZulu-Natal: Findings from the HITS cluster randomized clinical trial
Introduction: in South Africa, the HIV care cascade remains suboptimal. We investigated the impact of small conditional financial incentives (CFIs) and male-targeted HIV-specific decision-support application (EPIC-HIV) on the HIV care cascade.

Methods: in 2018, in uMkhanyakude district, 45 communities were randomly assigned to one of four arms: (i) CFI for home-based HIV testing and linkage to care within 6 weeks (R50 [US$3] food voucher each); (ii) EPIC-HIV which are based on self-determination theory; (iii) both CFI and EPIC-HIV; and (iv) standard of care. EPIC-HIV consisted of two components: EPIC-HIV 1, provided to men through a tablet before home-based HIV testing, and EPIC-HIV 2, offered 1 month later to men who tested positive but had not yet linked to care. Linking HITS trial data to national antiretroviral treatment (ART) programme data and HIV surveillance programme data, we estimated HIV status awareness after the HITS trial implementation, ART status 3 month after the trial and viral load suppression 1 year later. Analysis included all known individuals living with HIV in the study area including those who did not participated in the HITS trial.

Results: among the 33,778 residents in the study area, 2763 men and 7266 women were identified as living with HIV by the end of the intervention period and included in the analysis. After the intervention, awareness of HIV-positive status was higher in the CFI arms compared to non-CFI arms (men: 793/908 [87.3%] vs. 1574/1855 [84.9%], RR = 1.03 [95% CI: 0.99−1.07]; women: 2259/2421 [93.3%] vs. 4439/4845 [91.6%], RR = 1.02 [95% CI: 1.00−1.04]). Three months after the intervention, no differences were found for linkage to ART between arms. One year after the intervention, only 1829 viral test results were retrieved. Viral suppression was higher but not significant in the EPIC-HIV intervention arms among men (65/99 [65.7%] vs. 182/308 [59.1%], RR = 1.11 [95% CI: 0.88−1.40]).

Conclusions: small CFIs can contribute to achieve the first step of the HIV care cascade. However, neither CFIs nor EPIC-HIV was sufficient to increase the number of people on ART. Additional evidence is needed to confirm the impact of EPIC-HIV on viral suppression.
counselling, financial incentives, HIV, HIV care cascade, home-based HIV testing, mHealth
1758-2652
Inghels, Maxime
11722dfa-1778-47e0-8a64-f7473f2f63a2
Kim, Hae-Young
43ef990e-9e89-4fa0-a7be-edc8158459f0
Mathenjwa, Thulile
7bf06f13-9b48-4b13-b3fc-97782f5e67d7
Shahmanesh, Maryam
d88581c9-0ef2-4506-b8d3-d72682936a09
Seeley, Janet
f3106c01-ac91-4ffc-945a-6db3558fd8eb
Wyke, Sally
969980b4-2c66-4015-add3-7f3985af21cd
Matthews, Philippa
43cfbc76-9329-4421-9eed-b6788b98b3eb
Adeagbo, Oluwafemi
1668adf1-8c3a-42cb-af20-da553840bc86
Gareta, Dickman
8ebdbf76-4f3a-43ab-87e6-7eab48a1119d
McGrath, Nuala
b75c0232-24ec-443f-93a9-69e9e12dc961
Yapa, H. Manisha
b8b30d61-3eb3-4668-8460-fcdd8b3b99b1
Blandford, Ann
1a959d23-6ce2-41bd-89ea-b81b61ec5f7a
Zuma, Thembelihle
6e5dfc5e-d0b9-4a52-be15-fa78a3aa4a53
Dobra, Adrian
3754beab-767d-4b2a-abf4-184b8363eb23
Barnighausen, Till
f99001d2-60f1-4447-b554-b01dca4b4c5e
Tanser, Frank
a7112c48-809b-4f7c-8662-eaef445891f4
Inghels, Maxime
11722dfa-1778-47e0-8a64-f7473f2f63a2
Kim, Hae-Young
43ef990e-9e89-4fa0-a7be-edc8158459f0
Mathenjwa, Thulile
7bf06f13-9b48-4b13-b3fc-97782f5e67d7
Shahmanesh, Maryam
d88581c9-0ef2-4506-b8d3-d72682936a09
Seeley, Janet
f3106c01-ac91-4ffc-945a-6db3558fd8eb
Wyke, Sally
969980b4-2c66-4015-add3-7f3985af21cd
Matthews, Philippa
43cfbc76-9329-4421-9eed-b6788b98b3eb
Adeagbo, Oluwafemi
1668adf1-8c3a-42cb-af20-da553840bc86
Gareta, Dickman
8ebdbf76-4f3a-43ab-87e6-7eab48a1119d
McGrath, Nuala
b75c0232-24ec-443f-93a9-69e9e12dc961
Yapa, H. Manisha
b8b30d61-3eb3-4668-8460-fcdd8b3b99b1
Blandford, Ann
1a959d23-6ce2-41bd-89ea-b81b61ec5f7a
Zuma, Thembelihle
6e5dfc5e-d0b9-4a52-be15-fa78a3aa4a53
Dobra, Adrian
3754beab-767d-4b2a-abf4-184b8363eb23
Barnighausen, Till
f99001d2-60f1-4447-b554-b01dca4b4c5e
Tanser, Frank
a7112c48-809b-4f7c-8662-eaef445891f4

Inghels, Maxime, Kim, Hae-Young, Mathenjwa, Thulile, Shahmanesh, Maryam, Seeley, Janet, Wyke, Sally, Matthews, Philippa, Adeagbo, Oluwafemi, Gareta, Dickman, McGrath, Nuala, Yapa, H. Manisha, Blandford, Ann, Zuma, Thembelihle, Dobra, Adrian, Barnighausen, Till and Tanser, Frank (2024) Population impacts of conditional financial incentives and a male-targeted digital decision support application on the HIV treatment cascade in rural KwaZulu-Natal: Findings from the HITS cluster randomized clinical trial. Journal of the International AIDS Society, 27 (5), [e26248]. (doi:10.1002/jia2.26248).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Introduction: in South Africa, the HIV care cascade remains suboptimal. We investigated the impact of small conditional financial incentives (CFIs) and male-targeted HIV-specific decision-support application (EPIC-HIV) on the HIV care cascade.

Methods: in 2018, in uMkhanyakude district, 45 communities were randomly assigned to one of four arms: (i) CFI for home-based HIV testing and linkage to care within 6 weeks (R50 [US$3] food voucher each); (ii) EPIC-HIV which are based on self-determination theory; (iii) both CFI and EPIC-HIV; and (iv) standard of care. EPIC-HIV consisted of two components: EPIC-HIV 1, provided to men through a tablet before home-based HIV testing, and EPIC-HIV 2, offered 1 month later to men who tested positive but had not yet linked to care. Linking HITS trial data to national antiretroviral treatment (ART) programme data and HIV surveillance programme data, we estimated HIV status awareness after the HITS trial implementation, ART status 3 month after the trial and viral load suppression 1 year later. Analysis included all known individuals living with HIV in the study area including those who did not participated in the HITS trial.

Results: among the 33,778 residents in the study area, 2763 men and 7266 women were identified as living with HIV by the end of the intervention period and included in the analysis. After the intervention, awareness of HIV-positive status was higher in the CFI arms compared to non-CFI arms (men: 793/908 [87.3%] vs. 1574/1855 [84.9%], RR = 1.03 [95% CI: 0.99−1.07]; women: 2259/2421 [93.3%] vs. 4439/4845 [91.6%], RR = 1.02 [95% CI: 1.00−1.04]). Three months after the intervention, no differences were found for linkage to ART between arms. One year after the intervention, only 1829 viral test results were retrieved. Viral suppression was higher but not significant in the EPIC-HIV intervention arms among men (65/99 [65.7%] vs. 182/308 [59.1%], RR = 1.11 [95% CI: 0.88−1.40]).

Conclusions: small CFIs can contribute to achieve the first step of the HIV care cascade. However, neither CFIs nor EPIC-HIV was sufficient to increase the number of people on ART. Additional evidence is needed to confirm the impact of EPIC-HIV on viral suppression.

Text
HITS_manuscript_revised_2_Not_Blinded_resubmitted_190324 - Accepted Manuscript
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
Download (139kB)
Text
Journal of the International AIDS Society - 2024 - Inghels - Population impacts of conditional financial incentives and a - Version of Record
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
Download (921kB)
Image
fig1_revised
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
Download (831kB)
Image
fig2_revised
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
Download (80kB)
Image
fig3_revised
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
Download (58kB)
Text
Appendices
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
Download (795kB)

Show all 6 downloads.

More information

Accepted/In Press date: 9 April 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 2 May 2024
Published date: 2 May 2024
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Authors. Journal of the International AIDS Society published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of International AIDS Society.
Keywords: counselling, financial incentives, HIV, HIV care cascade, home-based HIV testing, mHealth

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 489851
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/489851
ISSN: 1758-2652
PURE UUID: 11538e51-607c-42e7-a89c-f7adc8e753b0
ORCID for Nuala McGrath: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1039-0159

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 03 May 2024 16:43
Last modified: 29 May 2024 01:45

Export record

Altmetrics

Contributors

Author: Maxime Inghels
Author: Hae-Young Kim
Author: Thulile Mathenjwa
Author: Maryam Shahmanesh
Author: Janet Seeley
Author: Sally Wyke
Author: Philippa Matthews
Author: Oluwafemi Adeagbo
Author: Dickman Gareta
Author: Nuala McGrath ORCID iD
Author: H. Manisha Yapa
Author: Ann Blandford
Author: Thembelihle Zuma
Author: Adrian Dobra
Author: Till Barnighausen
Author: Frank Tanser

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×