Experiences and perceptions of conditional cash incentive provision and cessation among people with HIV for care engagement: A qualitative study
Julia Giordano, Jayne Lewis-Kulzer, Lina Montoya, Eliud Akama, Harriet Fridah Adhiambo, Everlyne Nyadieka, Sarah Iguna, Elizabeth A. Bukusi, Thomas Odeny, Carol S. Camlin, Harsha Thirumurthy, Maya Petersen, Elvin H. Geng

TL;DR
This study explores how people with HIV in Kenya feel about receiving and then stopping financial incentives for staying in care, finding mixed effects on their ability to continue treatment.
Contribution
The study provides novel qualitative insights into the impact of conditional cash transfer cessation on HIV care engagement.
Findings
Participants showed high intrinsic motivation to engage in care regardless of incentives.
Cessation of incentives affected some participants' ability to access care due to financial constraints.
Concerns were raised about incentives fostering dependency.
Abstract
Consistent engagement in HIV treatment is needed for healthy outcomes, yet substantial loss-to-follow up persists, leading to increased morbidity, mortality and onward transmission risk. Although conditional cash transfers (CCTs) address structural barriers, recent findings suggest that incentive effects are time-limited, with cessation resulting in HIV care engagement deterioration. We explored incentive experiences, perceptions, and effects after cessation to investigate potential mechanisms of this observation. This qualitative study was nested within a larger trial, AdaPT-R (NCT02338739), focused on HIV care engagement in western Kenya. A subset of participants were purposively sampled from AdaPT-R participants: adults with HIV who had recently started ART, received CCTs for one year, completed one year of follow-up without missing a clinic visit, and were randomized to either…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health · Global Maternal and Child Health
