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‘The person cutting the path does not know his trail is crooked’. Drawing lessons learned from people accessing antiretroviral treatment services to propose a person-centered care (PCC) minimum practice standard

Article: 2305555 | Received 09 Oct 2023, Accepted 03 Jan 2024, Published online: 22 Jan 2024
 

Abstract

Introduction: Person-centered care (PCC) in HIV services aims to improve client experiences, advance service accessibility and treatment outcomes and accelerate progress towards epidemic control. For PCC to be responsive, providers and clients must work together to identify clients’ priorities. However, providers often neglect to identify non-clinical client concerns and clients may feel inhibited due to language or unequal power dynamics.

Methods: While evaluating results from a mixed-methods study on implementation of a Person-Centered Care Assessment Tool (PCC-AT) in Ghana, our study team identified contrasting perspectives from people on antiretroviral treatment (ART) and providers that elucidated the need for a PCC minimum practice standard. Our team examined qualitative data to propose a five step PCC minimum practice standard.

Discussion: Because PCC is a broad concept, with scarce practical implementable information to support a framework for its operationalization, its consistent and accurate implementation is unlikely without the presence and utilization of a Minimum Practice Standard. Future research should identify aims and further elucidate quality standards within each component of the minimum PCC practice standard.

This article is part of the following collections:
Person/Participant-Centred Approaches on Advances in HIV Management

Consent

We confirm that all participants including ART providers and clients provided informed consent in order to participate in this research.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Funding

Support for this article was funded by JSI Research and Training Institute, Inc.