摘要
Background:A better understanding of why HIV-exposed/infected children fail to attend their scheduled follow-up medical appointments for HIV-related care would allow for interventions to enhance the delivery of care.The aim of this study was to determine characteristics of the caregiver-child dyad(CCD)associated with children’s non-adherence to scheduled follow-up medical appointments in HIV programs in Cameroon.Methods:We conducted a case-control analysis of the usual-care group of CCDs from the MORE CARE trial,in which the effect of mobile phone reminders for HIV-exposed/infected children in attending follow-up appointments was assessed from January to March 2013.For this study,the absence of a child at their appointment was considered a case and the presence of a child at their appointment was defined as a control.We used three multivariate binary logistic regression analyses.The best-fit model was the one which had the smallest chi-square value with the Hosmer-Lemeshow test(HLχ^(2)).Magnitudes of associations were expressed by odds ratio(OR),with a p-value<0.05 considered as statistically significant.Results:We included 30 cases and 31 controls.Our best-fit model which considered the sex of the adults and children separately(HLχ^(2)=3.5)showed that missing scheduled medical appointments was associated with:lack of formal education of the caregiver(OR 29.1,95%CI 1.1-777.0;p=0.044),prolonged time to the next appointment/follow-up(OR[1 week increase]1.4,95%CI 1.03-2.0;p=0.032),and being a female child(OR 5.2,95%CI 1.2-23.1;p=0.032).One model(HLχ^(2)=10.5)revealed that woman-boy pairs adhered less to medical appointments compared to woman-girl pairs(OR 4.9,95%CI 1.05-22.9;p=0.044).Another model(HLχ^(2)=11.1)revealed that man-boy pairs were more likely to attend appointments compared to woman-girl pairs(OR 0.23,95%CI 0.06-0.93;p=0.039).There were no statistical associations for the ages of the children or the caregivers,the study sites,or the HIV status(confirmed vs.suspected)of the children.Conclusion:The profile of children who would not attend follow-up medical appointments in an HIV program was:a female,with a caregiver who has had no formal education,and with a longer follow-up appointment interval.There is a possibility that female children are favored by female caregivers and that male children are favored by male caregivers when they come to medical care.