A Cross Sectional Study of the Association Between Antiretroviral therapy With Depression and health Related Quality of Life in Patients Infected With HIV in Kasempa,Zambia
Abstract
Background
Many HIV-infected patients are accessing antiretroviral therapy (ART) in Zambia. This
has enabled them to live longer. However, it is necessary to determine whether such
improvements are accompanied with parallel improvements in quality of life. The
purpose of this research was to determine whether ART was associated with lower levels
of depression and higher levels of health-related quality of life (HRQOL). The primary
objective was to compare the association of ART with depression and Health Related
Quality of Life (HRQOL) in treatment naïve and treatment experienced patients. The
specific objectives were to screen for levels of depression and HRQOL in HIV infected
patients, and to compare these levels between ART-experienced and ART-naїve patients
Methodology
This was a cross sectional study in which 140 HIV-infected adults (70 ART-experienced
and 70 ART-naïve) in Kasempa district were enrolled by convenient sampling.
Independent variables of sex, age, marital status, education and employment status were
matched across the two groups to avoid their confounding effect and bias. Depression
and HRQOL were screened using the CES-D and MOS-HIV tools respectively in both
groups. The average scores for depression in both groups were compared using the t-test.
Mental Health Summary scores (MHS) and Physical Health Summary scores (PHS)
derived from the MOS-HIV tool were obtained by factor analysis and linearly
transformed into a 0-100 scale. These scores were also compared between the two
groups using the t-test. Multiple linear regression was used to determine the factors that
were significantly associated with depression and HRQOL in both groups.
Results
The mean depression scores were found to be lower among ART-experienced clients
compared with their ART-naïve counterparts with a mean difference of 7.40 (95% C.I
3.77-11.03; P < 0.0001). Overall, ART-experienced participants had higher HRQOL
scores compared with their ART- naïve counterparts with differences of 23.0 (95% C.I
16.0-30.1; P < 0.0001) and 11.2 (95% C.I 6.0-16.4; P < 0.0001) in MHS and PHS scores
respectively.
Discussion and Conclusion
Being ART-experienced was associated with lower depression scores and higher
HRQOL scores when compared with being ART-naïve. Lower depression scores and
higher HRQOL scores were associated with being male, married, single, asymptomatic
and having higher CD4 counts.
Recommendations
It is recommended that clinicians caring for HIV-infected persons should be screening
routinely for depression and HRQOL in these patients in order to identify clients who
may need psychosocial care. This will ensure that complete and holistic treatment is
offered to such clients.
Publisher
University of Zambia
Description
Master of Science in HIV Medicine