Social and Structural Interventions to Reduce Strikingly High Post-Hospital Mortality for People Living with HIV in Sub-Saharan Africa

社会和结构性干预措施旨在降低撒哈拉以南非洲艾滋病毒感染者极高的出院后死亡率

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Abstract

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Death following hospitalization remains strikingly high for people living with HIV (PLHIV) in sub-Saharan Africa. Hospitalization represents a key opportunity for targeted interventions, yet evidence for effective approaches remains limited. We conducted a best-evidence narrative review, framed by the Andersen Model of Health Care Utilization, to examine factors contributing to post-hospital mortality and assess recent interventions. RECENT FINDINGS: PLHIV in sub-Saharan Africa have a 12-26% risk of death within 3-6 months of discharge. Social and structural barriers-including poverty, stigma, food insecurity, and low self-efficacy-are central mediating factors. We reviewed three disease-neutral interventions (HomeLink, Daraja, ReCharge) providing home-based support, counseling, and care linkage. While feasible and acceptable, mortality impact was mixed due to small sample sizes and advanced illness. The hospital-to-home transition is a critical window for intensified differentiated services to reduce mortality among PLHIV. Further research is needed to define scalable and cost-effective models to improve survival and close gaps in HIV care.

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