2018
Acceptability of Mobile Phone-Based Nurse-Delivered Counseling Intervention to Improve HIV Treatment Adherence and Self-Care Behaviors Among HIV-Positive Women in India
Duggal M, Chakrapani V, Liberti L, Satyanarayna V, Varghese M, Singh P, Ranganathan M, Chandra P, Reynolds NR. Acceptability of Mobile Phone-Based Nurse-Delivered Counseling Intervention to Improve HIV Treatment Adherence and Self-Care Behaviors Among HIV-Positive Women in India. AIDS Patient Care And STDs 2018, 32: 349-359. PMID: 30179531, PMCID: PMC6121177, DOI: 10.1089/apc.2017.0315.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsHIV-positive womenPhone-based counselingSelf-care behaviorsAntiretroviral treatmentGovernment ART centersHIV treatment adherencePersonalized care approachesMental health issuesAdherence interventionsTreatment adherenceCare approachMost womenHealth issuesWomenLimited literacyCounseling interventionCounselingText messagingFamily membersAdherenceFuture studiesInterventionAcceptabilityART centerKey informants
2016
MAHILA: a protocol for evaluating a nurse-delivered mHealth intervention for women with HIV and psychosocial risk factors in India
Reynolds NR, Satyanarayana V, Duggal M, Varghese M, Liberti L, Singh P, Ranganathan M, Jeon S, Chandra PS. MAHILA: a protocol for evaluating a nurse-delivered mHealth intervention for women with HIV and psychosocial risk factors in India. BMC Health Services Research 2016, 16: 352. PMID: 27491288, PMCID: PMC4973541, DOI: 10.1186/s12913-016-1605-1.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsTreatment adherenceHIV infectionMiddle-income countriesDepressive symptomsAntiretroviral treatment adherenceHIV-1 RNANon-specialist nursesMobile health interventionsPsychosocial risk factorsMobile phone interventionQuality of lifeClinical outcomesSpecialist nursesTreatment armsIllness perceptionsPreliminary efficacyRisk factorsOutcome measuresPhone interventionMHealth interventionsPsychosocial barriersHealth interventionsHIVAdherencePsychosocial vulnerability