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A qualitative investigation of adherence to nutritional therapy in malnourished adult AIDS patients in Kenya

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 February 2011

Filippo Dibari*
Affiliation:
Valid International, 35 Leopold Street, Oxford OX4 1TW, UK UCL Centre for International Health and Development, Institute of Child Health, 30 Guilford Street, London WC1N 1EH, UK
Paluku Bahwere
Affiliation:
Valid International, 35 Leopold Street, Oxford OX4 1TW, UK
Isabelle Le Gall
Affiliation:
MSF-France, Nairobi, Kenya/Paris, France
Saul Guerrero
Affiliation:
Valid International, 35 Leopold Street, Oxford OX4 1TW, UK
David Mwaniki
Affiliation:
Centre for Public Health, Kenya Medical Research Institute, KEMRI/CPHR, Nairobi, Kenya Academy for Educational Development/Regional Office for Eastern and Central Africa, Nairobi, Kenya
Andrew Seal
Affiliation:
UCL Centre for International Health and Development, Institute of Child Health, 30 Guilford Street, London WC1N 1EH, UK
*
*Corresponding author: Email [email protected]
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Abstract

Objective

To understand factors affecting the compliance of malnourished, HIV-positive adults with a nutritional protocol using ready-to-use therapeutic food (RUTF; Plumpy'nut®).

Design

Qualitative study using key informant interviews, focus group discussions and direct observations.

Setting

Ministry of Health HIV/programme supported by Médecins Sans Frontièrs (MSF) in Nyanza Province, Kenya.

Subjects

Adult patients (n 46) currently or previously affected by HIV-associated wasting and receiving anti-retroviral therapy, their caregivers (n 2) and MoH/MSF medical employees (n 8).

Results

Thirty-four out of forty-six patients were receiving RUTF (8360 kJ/d) at the time of the study and nineteen of them were wasted (BMI < 17 kg/m2). Six of the thirteen wasted out-patients came to the clinic without a caregiver and were unable to carry their monthly provision (12 kg) of RUTF home because of physical frailty. Despite the patients’ enthusiasm about their weight gain and rapid resumption of labour activities, the taste of the product, diet monotony and clinical conditions associated with HIV made it impossible for half of them to consume the daily prescription. Sharing the RUTF with other household members and mixing with other foods were common. Staff training did not include therapeutic dietetic counselling.

Conclusions

The level of reported compliance with the prescribed dose of RUTF was low. An improved approach to treating malnourished HIV-positive adults in limited resource contexts is needed and must consider strategies to support patients without a caregiver, development of therapeutic foods more suited to adult taste, specific dietetic training for health staff and the provision of liquid therapeutic foods for severely ill patients.

Type
Research paper
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2011

Undernutrition associated with HIV is a public health concern in Africa. Demographic and health surveys in eleven sub-Saharan countries estimated that 10·3 % of HIV-infected women (aged 15–49 years) had a BMI <18·5 kg/m2(Reference Uthman1); data for men were not available. In urban Lusaka, Zambia, 9 % of adults (3624 out of 40 778) started anti-retroviral therapy (ART) with a BMI < 16·0 kg/m2(Reference Koethe, Lukusa and Giganti2).

Despite the increasing availability of ART, and patients enrolled in food programmes while on treatment reporting greater adherence to their medication(Reference Wanke, Silva and Knox3, Reference Byron, Gillespie and Nangami4), HIV wasting is still common. Although the beneficial effects of ART on severe malnutrition in adults are well documented, Carr(Reference Carr5) reported severe toxicity associated with ART in well-nourished individuals, and it has been suggested that side effects may be worse in malnourished individuals(Reference Koethe, Chi and Megazzini6).

However, the relationship between nutritional status, therapy and survival of adults undergoing ART is controversial. According to Paton et al.(Reference Paton, Sangeetha and Earnest7), a BMI < 17 kg/m2 at the time of starting ART is associated with decreased survival in adults. A large observational study of patients receiving ART in Kenya and Cambodia (n 5069) showed that a weight gain of only 5 % in 3 months increased survival in adults with a BMI < 17 kg/m2(Reference Madec, Szumilin and Genevier8).

Bahwere et al.(Reference Bahwere, Sadler and Collins9) reported that a novel ready-to-use therapeutic food (RUTF), nutritionally similar to commercially available paediatric RUTF, was acceptable to malnourished Malawian patients who were not receiving ART, and that it improved their physical activity performance, nutritional status and survival.

On the other hand, Ndekha et al. (Reference Ndekha, van Oosterhout and Zijlstra10) found no difference in short-term survival when providing an energy-dense RUTF, or a lower-density porridge-based food, despite an increased weight gain with RUTF (n 450).

A retrospective analysis(Reference Sauvageot, Huerga and Genevier11) of surveillance data on adults under ART (n 329) and with a BMI < 17 kg/m2, who were either receiving or not receiving an RUTF (Afya; Compact AS, Bergen, Norway), also reported that it was difficult to conclude a clear benefit of supplementary food in the early months of ART in terms of survival.

In 2007, the UN officially approved the use of RUTF for the treatment of acute malnutrition in children(12). This approach has also been adopted in nutrition and health programmes in developing countries targeting adults with HIV/AIDS. However, only a paediatric formulation is commercially available and there is limited evidence for its efficacy, and little data on acceptability and adherence to this formulation in HIV/tuberculosis (TB)-positive adults.

To understand why nutritional support may not be providing consistent benefits, it is necessary to investigate, among other things, the compliance of patients to nutritional treatment and understand the factors that affect this. In the present paper, we use ‘compliance’ to describe the extent to which a person's behaviour – taking medication, following a diet and/or executing lifestyle changes – corresponds to agreed recommendations from a health-care provider(Reference Rand1315).

The research questions of the present study aim (i) to understand and describe compliance with a protocol based on a specific RUTF (Plumpy'nut®; Nutriset, Malaunay, France) among malnourished adults living with HIV; and (ii) to determine any key barriers to compliance.

To our knowledge, the present study is the first to qualitatively investigate compliance with nutritional protocols based on RUTF that aim at rehabilitating malnourished HIV adults. We report the results according to the COREQ (consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative research) guidelines(Reference Tong, Sainsbury and Craig16).

Experimental methods

The present research took place in Homa Bay, Nyanza Province, which is on the Kenyan side of Lake Victoria. In Kenya, in 2007, the prevalence of HIV was the highest in Nyanza Province (15·3 %), more than double the national prevalence estimate(17). In January 2006, the non-governmental organisation Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), France, introduced a nutritional rehabilitation programme for malnourished adults enrolled in the Ministry of Health (MoH) ART programme, Kenya, which utilised the most commonly available RUTF (brand name: Plumpy'nut®; 8360 kJ/d (2000 kcal/d) equal to four sachets of 92 g each). Adults (≥15 years of age) were considered malnourished (admission criteria) when BMI was <17 kg/m2 and/or middle upper-arm circumference (MUAC) was <185 mm and/or the presence of oedema was observed. Discharge criteria from the nutrition programme included BMI ≥18 kg/m2 and MUAC ≥ 185 mm, and absence of oedema in at least two consecutive visits.

Along with the supply of RUTF, the medical staff provided generic nutritional counselling. These same staff members had never received any specific training in therapeutic nutritional treatment counselling for HIV adult patients.

Subjects recruitment and sampling

The study subjects, enrolled at the MoH/MSF HIV/TB programme in Homa Bay health district, Nyanza Province, Kenya, came from three groups: patients enrolled in the programme (some already nutritionally rehabilitated); their caregivers; and medical staff (counsellors, nurses and clinical officers). Patients <15 years of age were not admitted into the study group. The patients were recruited either at MoH/MSF HIV clinics A and B at Homa Bay hospital or from TB wards 7 and 8 of the same hospital.

The study followed a non-probabilistic, purposive, heterogeneous, non-proportional quota sampling system. Data saturation was achieved after approximately two-thirds of the study; however, recruitment continued along the entire planned period (3 weeks). During the study period, patients coming for their usual routine visit were invited to participate by the nurse in charge of the nutrition programme. All the health staff working at the clinic during the study agreed to participate. All focus group discussions and interviews occurred in a quiet area within the HIV clinic compound in the presence of researchers only, whereas direct observations were made in the TB multi-drug resistance ward at Homa Bay hospital.

Data collection and data analysis

The research applied three qualitative methods and the results were triangulated. Focus group discussions involved patients and caregivers and one separate session with members of the MoH/MSF medical staff; semi-structured interviews were administered to patients on a one-to-one basis; direct unobtrusive observations were made of Plumpy'nut® distribution and consumption in the HIV/TB wards. The questionnaires and focus group discussions used a variety of techniques, including free listing, ranking exercises and open-ended questions (see footnotes in Table 3).

Questionnaires and focus group guides

Two guides were developed and piloted for use in the focus groups: one for patients and caregivers and one for the health staff members. The guides and questionnaires covered four topics: (i) information provided to patients about the recommended use and consumption of Plumpy'nut®; (ii) knowledge and attitude of patients about the role of Plumpy'nut® in their therapy; (iii) dietary practices and Plumpy'nut® consumption; and (iv) patient's and caregiver's experience of the Plumpy'nut® distribution system.

A checklist for the direct observations was developed and covered the ways of consuming Plumpy'nut®, their advantages and disadvantages, together with the role of the caregiver.

All focus group discussions were recorded on tape, allowing the checking of information that was not clear from the written notes. The focus group discussions and interviews did not last for more than 1.5 and 1 h, respectively. The direct observation sessions lasted between 30 min and 1 h. A small number of photographs were taken with the informed consent of patients.

The research team and the relationship with subjects

The focus group discussions and interviews were conducted in the Luo language. Two native speakers, a female and a male, were recruited as interpreters and provided with 2 d training on the study and methods to be used. Time for familiarisation with the study guides was provided.

The principal researcher was a Caucasian male who was trained in public health nutrition at MSc level, and was not an MSF employee. He attended all focus group sessions and benefited from simultaneous translation by an interpreter. The principal researcher personally facilitated, in English, the focus group discussion with the health staff, and subsequently transcribed the recorded tape himself. Other discussions were facilitated by the study interpreters. The discussion transcript was not returned to the members for comments or corrections. All participants were provided with information about the study and assured that clinical services or RUTF provision would not be affected by refusal to participate.

Identification of common themes

The focus group discussion transcripts were manually coded by the principal researcher, highlighting keywords, key concepts and any minor or contradictory themes. Records of direct observations were reviewed and evidence summarised. Quantitative data from the interviews and the clinical and socio-economic profile of the focus group participants were entered in EpiInfo version 3·4·3 (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, USA) and analysed in the STATA statistical software package version 8·0 (Stata Corp., College Station, TX, USA).

Detailed tables were prepared for each identified theme and its associated sub-themes. The theme tables contained separate columns referring to the evidence obtained on each theme using one of the three research methods. This allowed triangulation of evidence and comparison and discussion of the common themes that emerged. Following this process, the themes and sub-themes from the separate tables were compiled and overall conclusions drawn. Conclusions and associated recommendations were discussed with the health and management staff of the programme during a feedback process.

Results

From January 2008 to March 2009, MSF admitted 782 malnourished adults into the therapeutic nutrition programme; the monthly mean weight gain was 1·8 (sd 0·5) and 1·8 (sd 0·6) g/kg per d, respectively, for severely and moderately malnourished adults.

Study group characteristics

Table 1 provides descriptive data on the forty-six participating patients. Thirty-four were still under treatment with Plumpy'nut®. More than half of them were women and the average age was 33 years. All patients were married and the majority had their spouse still alive; twelve out of the forty-six patients were widowers. All subjects who were approached agreed to participate in the study and provided written informed consent.

Table 1 Profile of participating patients (n 46)

TB, tuberculosis; MUAC, middle upper-arm circumference.

*Age not specified.

†BMI ≥17 kg/m2 and/or MUAC ≥185 mm.

‡This group included thirteen out-patients and six in-patients. The in-patients were from the TB multi-drug resistance ward.

Table 2 summarises the methods used and the number of patients, caregivers and health staff participants. Twenty-two current and ex-patients received one-to-one interviews and eighteen participated in focus group discussions. Six in-patients were directly observed. Two caregivers were recruited to participate in focus group discussions. Eight MoH/MSF employees participated in the focus groups with the medical staff (counsellors, nurses and medical doctors). None of the subjects were involved in more than one data collection method.

Table 2 Summary of methods and participants

*None of the study subjects participated in more than one method.

Among the out-patients (n 13) who were still malnourished, six travelled to the clinic without a caregiver on the day of the study (two missing data). One walked, whereas the rest took public transport; the average time to reach the clinic was almost 2 h. The six in-patients recruited for the direct observations were found in the TB wards of Homa Bay hospital and they were all HIV positive; two of them were multi-drug resistant and their appetite might have been affected by their TB status and/or HIV status, plus by side effects of specific drugs.

Understanding compliance

The following sections summarise the key themes emerging from the analysis of the results. Only fourteen out of twenty-two interviewed patients reported complying with the prescribed amount of Plumpy'nut®.

Perceptions about Plumpy'nut®

Table 3 lists the aspects that may both enhance or decrease compliance with Plumpy'nut®, and were mentioned during the majority of focus groups and interviews. It was frequently reported that Plumpy'nut® can be ‘associated with a drug’ (same role and effect of a drug), ‘brings (physical) strength’ and ‘allows to go back to work’. Increases in weight gain were reported and feelings of hunger said to decrease. Positive feelings about the use of the product can be summarised by the quote: ‘ART is a drug to fight the infections, but does not give strength like Plumpy'nut® to go back to work’.

Table 3 Summary of key themes and sub-themes

ART, anti-retroviral therapy.

*The focus groups involved either patients together with caregivers (five groups, with three to five participants) or health staff members (one group with eight participants).

†Tool used: closed and/or open questions.

‡Tool used: free listing.

§Tool used: ranking exercise to select the main themes reported here.

Turning to the negative perceptions of participants, some patients complained that the taste of Plumpy'nut® was responsible for nausea and vomiting. Participants also argued that the ‘first 3 or 4 d are the most critical ones’ and that ‘after then, it becomes easier’ to comply with the prescription. Among the patients interviewed, only one out of forty mentioned oral thrush as the main cause for low acceptability. In contrast, the health staff focus group voiced that the initial clinical conditions including swallowing capacity are crucial for patients’ compliance. The interviewees provided suggestions about how to improve the product (see Table 3).

The medical staff expressed doubts about the role of Plumpy'nut® in promoting weight gain, since ‘ART is far more important in severely malnourished patients’.

Sharing practices

Compliance was found to be closely linked with food-sharing practices. More than half (fourteen out of twenty-two) of the interviewed patients reported sharing Plumpy'nut® with children and other adults and this was confirmed by most focus groups. The medical staff was particularly concerned about the sharing practice at the community level, because of their observation that ‘…in the hospital wards, it is common’. In two of the focus groups, patients reported incidents of Plumpy'nut® trading or selling. This, however, seems to be limited to schoolchildren, because among adults the product was associated with HIV treatment and was thus potentially stigmatising. The majority of patients who declared that they tried to prevent sharing (‘hiding the product in the closet from children’; ‘…or from adults’) did so because Plumpy'nut® was considered part of the ‘medical drug prescription’. Only one interviewee reported that Plumpy'nut® could be actually harmful for an HIV-negative person. One member of the medical staff suggested that Plumpy'nut® is so important for household food security that sharing represents a strategy to delay the moment of programme discharge.

Mixing Plumpy'nut® with other foods

Only one patient reported consuming Plumpy'nut® exclusively, whereas mixing Plumpy'nut® with other food was a common practice mainly with local staple starchy food (ugali), fresh vegetables, fish, rice, cereals, legumes, meat, cooked vegetables (sukuma wiki) and chapatti (in order of reported frequencies). Monotony of diet, nausea, vomiting or salty taste were the main reasons for mixing. Stirring Plumpy'nut® into hot water produces something that is similar to a popular, peanut-based, traditional food (ogila). Some others mentioned that ‘once you start mixing the Plumpy'nut®, it is hard to go back and eat it alone’. Members of the medical staff suggested (contrary to programme recommendations) that patients with severe clinical conditions (e.g. oral thrush) should mix the Plumpy'nut® with tea.

Key barriers to compliance

Inability to transport ration

Physical weakness, absence of a caregiver during collection of supplies, cost of transport and stigma were key barriers to compliance. The prescribed supply of Plumpy'nut® per out-patient was monthly and weighed approximately 12 kg. A malnourished out-patient without a caregiver did not have enough strength to carry such weight. Therefore, the out-patients were invited to take half of the monthly ration and come back to collect the second half of the supply in 2 weeks’ time. Health staff members reported that most patients could not afford to travel twice a month to the clinic. It can be speculated that these patients spread out the 2 weeks’ provision along the entire month. This is consistent with the reports of many patients. No data could be collected on how many patients came back to collect the missing mid-month supply or the relationship with defaulting and survival.

Stigma associated with therapeutic foods

In a region where HIV-related secondary malnutrition is common and treated with Plumpy'nut®, this product has become strongly associated with HIV. For this reason many patients were reluctant to walk home with boxes reading the brand name (Plumpy'nut®). One patient said ‘I can disguise the ART tablets saying that they cure something else, but I cannot disguise Plumpy'nut® because a month's supply is too bulky and visible’.

Clinical status and role of the caregiver

Among the in-patients who were directly observed, all patients with a severe clinical condition could not comply with the prescribed amount. Two of them died during the course of the study. Alternative therapeutic diets, such as therapeutic liquid milk (formulas F75 and F100), the intake of which may have been easier for severely ill patients, was not available.

It was reported and observed that in-patients in the ward with the most severe clinical conditions can consume Plumpy'nut® only if mixed with other suitable food (e.g. water or porridge). This requires assistance from the caregiver. Patients with severe clinical conditions were so weak that they did not have sufficient strength even to open the sachet and mix the product with food.

Discussion

The present study has indicated that compliance with therapeutic feeding within this HIV programme is likely to be low. We have identified a number of issues that may reduce the consumption of RUTF to below the prescribed level. Although the nature of the study setting might have affected the patients’ response, some of the findings are likely to be generalisable to other HIV and adult nutrition programmes that use this specific therapeutic food and a similar nutritional protocol.

The present study identified two groups of factors that limit specifically an RUTF-based protocol compliance: (i) factors directly related to the product design and (ii) factors related to programme design.

Factors related to product design

Although widely used for other patient groups, it is important to note that Plumpy'nut® was designed for treating severe acute malnutrition in children. There is evidence(18) to suggest that reported symptoms such as nausea and vomiting when consuming RUTF could be related to the drug treatment too. The taste of Plumpy'nut® was not considered suitable by many adult patients and therefore they often reduced intake or mixed it with other food. This practice may compromise the efficacy of RUTF by reducing overall energy and nutrient intake and delaying nutritional rehabilitation.

Despite the problems of taste and consistency acceptability, the results of this research suggested that most patients valued the nutritional therapy provided by Plumpy'nut®. Their attitude towards the product was more positive than that of most medical employees, perhaps because of lack of staff training on the anticipated benefits. However, the interviewed patients would reduce the sweetness (somebody suggested the addition of lemon juice), and would like to change the consistency into something ‘more liquid’ or ‘into the form of a biscuit’ or powder. Rarer comments mentioned included suggestions for improving the packaging, such as ‘the sachet packaging should be replaced with ice-cream cup with lid’.

Factors related to programme design

Certain problems in accessing and consuming the therapeutic food were accentuated by the design of the overall programme and inappropriate staff training. Patients were not informed about how to correctly consume the RUTF. For example, counselling messages inappropriately advised adding the RUTF to tea and advised feeding strategies that were not feasible for the patient. Advice to consume RUTF at meal times (3 times/d) and/or together with ART drugs was not conducive to ensuring adequate intake. Some of the patients admitted that they disregarded such advice because of the ‘strong’ – difficult to eat – nature of the product, their bad clinical conditions combined with ART side effects (lack of appetite, nausea, vomiting, etc.). More appropriate advice would have been that based on therapeutic feeding guidelines(19) and should have recommended having small bites of RUTF throughout the day until the daily prescription of sachets was consumed. Box 1 presents the most common questions expressed by patients during the present study. The same questions lead to key counselling messages.

Box 1

Box 1 During dietetic counselling* sessions, the topics to be covered should respond to the following questions expressed by patients during the study: What is Plumpy'nut® (food/drug; composition)? Who is supposed to use it? What are its components? How often should I eat it along the day? What should I do when I do not manage to eat it because of nausea, vomiting or lack of appetite? Could I mix it with other foods? What should I avoid to drink or eat together with Plumpy'nut®? What are the consequences if I share my ration of Plumpy'nut® with other persons? Is it good for somebody who is not HIV positive to eat Plumpy'nut®? Is it good for somebody who is not thin to eat Plumpy'nut®? When should I stop eating Plumpy'nut®? Will I become thin again when I stop eating it?

*For an example of dietetic counselling material for HIV therapeutic feeding in adults, contact [email protected].

Frail patients who came to a clinic appointment without a caregiver sometimes ended up losing half of the prescribed RUTF supply, as they were unable to transport the food to their home. The situation could be improved by re-design of the distribution system, perhaps involving community-based organisations to support home-based care. Their importance is recognised in many HIV and nutrition interventions and protocols(20Reference Bonnard24). The health programme also needed to acknowledge and address the stigma factor attached to Plumpy'nut®. This could involve the use of anonymous packaging.

In case of extremely frail patients, the caregiver played a fundamental role in trying to overcome key barriers for compliance, such as simply opening the sachets or mixing it with other foods.

Main limitations of the present study

The present research did not correlate the collected data with clinical information such as patients’ survival, CD4 count, weight gain or BMI changes that might have helped in understanding the impact of such a programme in the presence of household/community sharing, food mixing, lack of counselling and clinical difficulties in swallowing among others.

The present research did not aim to understand the link between nutritional therapy and ART compliance. RUTF is meant to be used in out-patient programmes, but the present study was restrained by lack of observations at the community level.

The two study interpreters were not only employed as health promoters in the MoH HIV programme but were also clients of the MoH/MSF HIV/TB programme. One of them had been previously successfully rehabilitated in the nutritional programme. Therefore, they might have previously met some of the patients enrolled in the study and/or developed specific perceptions about the topic, introducing possible bias.

Conclusions

Overall, the research suggests that training and information material is needed to ensure that medical staff can support the patient to overcome the first most crucial phase of the treatment. The very first contact with the patient should include a test to assess the swallowing capacity. Reduced capacity to swallow is common and it may imply a lower compliance with nutritional therapy and an increase in mortality risk. Consistent with the community-based management of malnutrition approach, medical staff should ask the patient to consume some amount of RUTF in his presence to verify his swallowing capacity. According to the results of this test, dietetic solutions must be discussed and agreed upon together with the patient and the caregiver when present. Patients who are unable to swallow at all should be hospitalised and treated according to the in-patient nutritional therapeutic protocol developed by WHO(25), which utilises milk-based liquid therapeutic nutritional products such as F75 and F100.

The study showed that Plumpy'nut®, designed for malnourished children, needs improvement to meet the palatability preferences expressed by adult patients. A reduction in the perception of sweetness and fat components was solicited by the patients. However, any HIV/TB therapeutic nutrition programme should not introduce newly designed RUTF until positive clinical results have been demonstrated.

Further studies more closely correlating compliance and recovery rates are likely to improve the perception of medical staff towards the effectiveness of this kind of programme, possibly improving their performance as well.

Acknowledgements

The present study was funded by Valid Nutrition via a grant from Irish International Cooperation. Valid Nutrition is involved in the development of ready-to-use therapeutic foods for use in AIDS patients. The authors have no conflict of interest to declare. F.D. conceptualised the study, collected and analysed the data and wrote the draft manuscript; P.B. and S.G. assisted in study design and interpretation of the data; I.L.G. and D.M. facilitated data collection and supported the fieldwork; A.S. provided overall research supervision and contributed to the study design and to later versions of the manuscript. Other contributions came from Lio Fieschi and Nicky Dent who gave useful technical advice. The authors express deep appreciation to the study team, the participants and the staff of the MSF-France and Homa Bay TB multi-drugs resistance ward for their support, and in particular to Pamela Pomito.

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Figure 0

Table 1 Profile of participating patients (n 46)

Figure 1

Table 2 Summary of methods and participants

Figure 2

Table 3 Summary of key themes and sub-themes