Derose Kathryn P, Felician Melissa, Han Bing, Palar Kartika, Ramírez Blanca, Farías Hugo, Martínez Homero
Health Program, RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, California, United States of America.
Pardee RAND Graduate School, Santa Monica, California, United States of America.
BMC Nutr. 2015;1. doi: 10.1186/s40795-015-0017-7. Epub 2015 Oct 15.
Food insecurity and poor nutrition are key barriers to anti-retroviral therapy (ART) adherence. Culturally-appropriate and sustainable interventions that provide nutrition counseling for people on ART and of diverse nutritional statuses are needed, particularly given rising rates of overweight and obesity among people living with HIV (PLHIV).
As part of scale-up of a nutritional counseling intervention, we recruited and trained 17 peer counselors from 14 government-run HIV clinics in Honduras to deliver nutritional counseling to ART patients using a highly interactive curriculum that was developed after extensive formative research on locally available foods and dietary patterns among PLHIV. All participants received the intervention; at baseline and 2 month follow-up, assessments included: 1) interviewer-administered, in-person surveys to collect data on household food insecurity (15-item scale), nutritional knowledge (13-item scale), dietary intake and diversity (number of meals and type and number of food groups consumed in past 24 hours); and 2) anthropometric measures (body mass index or BMI, mid-upper arm and waist circumferences). We used multivariable linear regression analysis to examine changes pre-post in food insecurity and the various nutritional outcomes while controlling for baseline characteristics and clinic-level clustering.
Of 482 participants at baseline, we had complete follow-up data on 356 (74%), of which 62% were women, median age was 39, 34% reported having paid work, 52% had completed primary school, and 34% were overweight or obese. In multivariate analyses adjusting for gender, age, household size, work status, and education, we found that between baseline and follow-up, household food insecurity decreased significantly among all participants (β=-0.47, p<.05) and among those with children under 18 (β=-1.16, p<.01), while nutritional knowledge and dietary intake and diversity also significantly improved, (β=0.88, p<.001; β=0.30, p<.001; and β=0.15, p<.001, respectively). Nutritional status (BMI, mid-arm and waist circumferences) showed no significant changes, but the brief follow-up period may not have been sufficient to detect changes.
A peer-delivered nutritional counseling intervention for PLHIV was associated with improvements in dietary quality and reduced food insecurity among a population of diverse nutritional statuses. Future research should examine if such an intervention can improve adherence among people on ART.
粮食不安全和营养不良是抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)依从性的关键障碍。鉴于感染艾滋病毒者(PLHIV)中超重和肥胖率不断上升,需要采取适合文化且可持续的干预措施,为接受抗逆转录病毒治疗且营养状况各异的人群提供营养咨询。
作为扩大营养咨询干预规模的一部分,我们从洪都拉斯14家政府运营的艾滋病毒诊所招募并培训了17名同伴咨询师,使用经过对PLHIV当地可得食物和饮食模式进行广泛形成性研究后开发的高度互动课程,为接受抗逆转录病毒治疗的患者提供营养咨询。所有参与者均接受了干预;在基线和2个月随访时,评估包括:1)由访谈员进行的面对面调查,以收集关于家庭粮食不安全(15项量表)、营养知识(13项量表)、饮食摄入量和多样性(过去24小时内的用餐次数以及食用的食物组类型和数量)的数据;2)人体测量指标(体重指数或BMI、上臂中部和腰围)。我们使用多变量线性回归分析来检查粮食不安全和各种营养结果在干预前后的变化,同时控制基线特征和诊所层面的聚类情况。
在基线时的482名参与者中,我们获得了356名(74%)的完整随访数据,其中62%为女性,中位年龄为39岁,34%报告有有偿工作,52%完成了小学教育,34%超重或肥胖。在对性别、年龄、家庭规模、工作状况和教育进行调整的多变量分析中,我们发现,在基线和随访之间,所有参与者(β=-0.47,p<0.05)以及有18岁以下子女的参与者(β=-1.16,p<0.01)的家庭粮食不安全状况显著下降,同时营养知识、饮食摄入量和多样性也显著改善(分别为β=0.88,p<0.001;β=0.30,p<0.001;β=0.15,p<0.001)。营养状况(BMI、上臂中部和腰围)没有显著变化,但随访期较短可能不足以检测到变化。
针对PLHIV的同伴提供的营养咨询干预与不同营养状况人群的饮食质量改善和粮食不安全状况减轻相关。未来的研究应探讨这种干预措施是否能提高接受抗逆转录病毒治疗者的依从性。