Understanding Predictors of Lifelong Initiation and Follow-up Treatment for adolescents and youth living with HIV (UPLIFT): an integrated prospective cohort in Eastern Cape, South Africa
Elona Toska, Olanrewaju Edun, Siyanai Zhou, Zea Leon, Nontokozo Langwenya, Janina Jochim, Janke Tolmay, Gayle Sherman, Lucie Dale Cluver

TL;DR
This study tracks long-term HIV treatment outcomes for adolescents in South Africa by combining survey and lab data to identify factors affecting health and adherence.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel integrated cohort linking self-reported data with lab records to explore lifelong HIV treatment outcomes in adolescents.
Findings
Self-reported antiretroviral therapy adherence was strongly associated with viral suppression.
Access to safe facilities and respectful staff improved HIV outcomes for adolescent girls and young women.
Exposure to sexual and intimate partner violence predicted worse viral load outcomes among adolescents.
Abstract
Adolescents living with HIV (ALHIV) are a priority population for achieving global HIV prevention and treatment targets but experience poorer outcomes than adults. Long-term follow-up is essential to understand their transition into adulthood. By linking self-reported survey data with routine laboratory records, we established a social science clinical cohort of ALHIV South Africa’s Eastern Cape to explore factors shaping their long-term health and well-being. Eligible participants were adolescents who were part of a three-wave quantitative cohort of ALHIV and not living with HIV (2014–2018) and had consented (adolescent and caregiver) to having their self-reported interviews linked with routine health records (n=1563). Adolescents were recruited into the existing three-wave cohort through clinic and community-based methods (97% enrolment, >90% retention over three waves). Between 2019…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health · HIV-related health complications and treatments
