Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15112567
Title: Methadone maintenance treatment reduces the vulnerability of drug users on hiv/aids in vietnamese remote settings: Assessing the changes in hiv knowledge, perceived risk, and testing uptake after a 12-month follow-up
Authors: Nguyen, T.M.T
Tran, B.X
Fleming, M
Pham, M.D
Nguyen, L.T
Le, H.T
Nguyen, A.L.T
Le, H.T
Nguyen, T.H
Hoang, V.H
Le, X.T.T
Vuong, Q.H
Ho, M.T
Dam, V.N
Vuong, T.T
Do, H.N
Nguyen, V
Nguyen, H.L.T
Do, H.P
Doan, P.L
Nguyen, H.H
Latkin, C.A
Ho, C.S.H
Ho, R.C.M 
Keywords: methadone
silver
methadone
Article
attitude
controlled study
developing country
disease transmission
drug dependence
drug use
eating
female
follow up
hospital
human
Human immunodeficiency virus infected patient
Human immunodeficiency virus infection
knowledge
longitudinal study
major clinical study
methadone treatment
mosquito
multicenter study
needle sharing
outcome assessment
patient counseling
pretest posttest design
prevalence
risk assessment
Viet Nam
Vietnamese
adult
attitude to health
counseling
drug dependence
Human immunodeficiency virus infection
male
middle aged
opiate substitution treatment
organization and management
procedures
psychology
rural health care
transmission
Adult
Counseling
Drug Users
Follow-Up Studies
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
HIV Infections
Humans
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Methadone
Middle Aged
Opiate Substitution Treatment
Rural Health Services
Substance-Related Disorders
Vietnam
Issue Date: 2018
Publisher: MDPI
Citation: Nguyen, T.M.T, Tran, B.X, Fleming, M, Pham, M.D, Nguyen, L.T, Le, H.T, Nguyen, A.L.T, Le, H.T, Nguyen, T.H, Hoang, V.H, Le, X.T.T, Vuong, Q.H, Ho, M.T, Dam, V.N, Vuong, T.T, Do, H.N, Nguyen, V, Nguyen, H.L.T, Do, H.P, Doan, P.L, Nguyen, H.H, Latkin, C.A, Ho, C.S.H, Ho, R.C.M (2018). Methadone maintenance treatment reduces the vulnerability of drug users on hiv/aids in vietnamese remote settings: Assessing the changes in hiv knowledge, perceived risk, and testing uptake after a 12-month follow-up. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 15 (11) : 2567. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15112567
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: Methadone Maintenance Treatment (MMT) program has been considered a medium through which human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) risks assessment and prevention on drug use/HIV-infected population can be effectively conducted. Studies concerning the implementation of such idea on patients in remote, under-developed areas, however, have been limited. Having the clinics established in three mountainous provinces of Vietnam, this study aimed to evaluate the changes in knowledge of HIV, perceived risk, and HIV testing uptake of the patients. A longitudinal study was conducted at six MMT clinics in three provinces with a pre-and post-assessments among 300 patients. Outcomes of interest were compared between baseline and after 12 months. The magnitude of changes was extrapolated. The proportion of participants reporting that their HIV knowledge was not good fell by 4.4% (61.3% at the baseline vs. 56.8% at 12 months). The significant improvement seen was in the knowledge that needle sharing was a mode of transmission (82.7% vs. 89.6%). Nevertheless, the majority of participants reportedly considered mosquitoes/insect and eating with the HIV-infected patient were the route of transmission at both time points (84.7% vs. 89.1%, 92.2% vs. 93.3%, respectively). This study found a limited improvement in HIV knowledge and testing uptake among MMT patients following a 12-month period. It also highlighted some shortcomings in the knowledge, attitudes and practices (KAP) of these patients, in particular, incorrect identification of HIV transmission routes, among patients both at program initiation and follow-up. The findings lent support to the argument for enhancing education and counseling efforts at MMT clinics regarding HIV, as well as for improving access to preventive and health care services through the integration of MMT/HIV services. © 2018, MDPI AG. All rights reserved.
Source Title: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/183826
ISSN: 1661-7827
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph15112567
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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