Monday, November 5, 2012

Comprehensive care and HIV prophylaxis after sexual assault in rural South

Comprehensive care and HIV prophylaxis after sexual assault in rural South Africa: the Refentse intervention study. BMJ. 2009 Mar 13;338:b515.

Although international guidelines specify the central role of the health sector in providing comprehensive care, including HIV post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP), after sexual assault, in both industrialised and developing countries there are many challenges to providing timely and comprehensive services. A nurse-driven model of post-rape care was integrated into existing hospital services; the before and after study design evaluated impacts on quality of care, reviewing 334 hospital charts and conducting interviews with 16 service providers and 109 patients in a 450-bed district hospital in rural South Africa. The key measures for improvement examined were quality of care after rape (forensic history and examination, provision of emergency contraception, prophylaxis for sexually transmitted infections, referrals); provision of HIV counselling and testing and provision and completion of full 28 day course of PEP; and service utilisation (number of service providers seen on first visit and number of rape cases presenting to hospital per month). After completing baseline research, Kim and colleagues introduced a five-part intervention model, consisting of a sexual violence advisory committee, hospital rape management policy, training workshop for service providers, designated examining room, and community awareness campaigns. Existing services had been fragmented and of poor quality. After the intervention, there were considerable improvements in clinical history and examination, pregnancy testing, emergency contraception, prophylaxis for sexually transmitted infections; HIV counselling and testing, PEP, trauma counselling, and referrals. Completion of the 28-day course of PEP drugs increased from 20% to 58%. The authors conclude that it is possible to improve the quality of care after sexual assault, including HIV prophylaxis, within a rural South African hospital at modest cost, using existing staff. With additional training, nurses can become the primary providers of this care.

Editors’ note: Refentse means ‘we shall overcome’ in Venda, the language of this rural South African area and that is exactly what these investigators aimed to do. Aside from immediate genital and bodily injuries, sexual violence brings risks of HIV and sexually transmitted disease, unwanted pregnancy, urinary tract infections, chronic pelvic pain, miscarriage, depression, substance abuse, post-traumatic stress disorder, and suicide. They used formative research to conduct a baseline assessment with providers and patients to define problems and design a strategy for change. The process and its positive findings are an example for managers and providers of sexual assault care, but also of other services, who are keen to embark on a transparent, participatory process to improve their programme outcomes.

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