A Process Evaluation of the Isoniazid Preventive Therapy Program in Sanyati District, Mashonaland West Province, Zimbabwe 2019
Chamunorwa Mhembe
Journal of Interventional Epidemiology and Public Health · 2023-12
Abstract
Introduction: The Isoniazid Preventive Therapy (IPT) is a public health program dedicated to reducing mortality due to TB through early screening for active TB among people who are HIV-positive and early initiation on IPT of all who are eligible. A review of the 2019 Sanyati District IPT program data indicated that not all clients eligible for the IPT were initiated on the IPT program. In January, June, September, and December, 3% of IPT eligible HIV-positive clients were initiated on IPT; in March, May, and October, 2%, in April, July and November, 1%, in February, 5% and in August 2019, 4%. Only 4% of all IPT illegible HIV positive clients were initiated on IPT in 2019 against a target of 100% set by the Global Fund. A 31% dropout rate was recorded from the 94 clients initiated on IPT. Of the 26 health facilities in Sanyati District including five Kadoma City Council Clinics, only 16 health facilities were offering Antiretroviral Therapy (ART) initiation and IPT services. The IPT program in Sanyati District has never been evaluated, therefore a process evaluation of the IPT programme in the district was conducted to recommend strategies to improve on initiation of all eligible IPT clients. Method: A process evaluation among 16 health facilities which were offering IPT and ART services in Sanyati District was conducted using the logic model and the IPT program theory. The evaluator employed a mixed methods approach, using interviewer administered questionnaires, key informant guides to collect data and a review of IPT registers and all the documents used for the IPT program. The Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) software was used to generate frequencies, means and proportions, narrative, content, and thematic analyses were used for qualitative data analysis. The evaluation was approved by Mashonaland West Provincial Ethics Committee and permission was obtained from Sanyati District Health Executive and the Health Studies Office.
MeSH terms
- Medicine
- Family medicine
- Public health
- Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
- Isoniazid
- Environmental health
- Antiretroviral therapy
- Program evaluation
- Gerontology
- Tuberculosis