Ugandan Study Participants Experience Electronic Monitoring of Antiretroviral Therapy Adherence as Welcomed Pressure to Adhere
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Date
2018-06-20Author
Campbell, Jeffrey I.
Eyal, Nir
Musiimenta, Angella
Burns, Bridget
Natukunda, Sylvia
Musinguzi, Nicholas
Haberer, Jessica E.
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Many new technologies monitor patients’ and study participants’ medical adherence. Some have cautioned that these devices
transgress personal autonomy and ethics. But do they? This qualitative study explored how Ugandan study participants
perceive the effect of electronic monitoring of their adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART) on their freedoms to be nonadherent
and pursue other activities that monitoring may inadvertently expose. Between August 2014 and June 2015, we
interviewed 60 Ugandans living with HIV and enrolled in the Uganda AIDS Rural Treatment Outcomes (UARTO) study, a
longitudinal, observational study involving electronic adherence monitors (EAMs) to assess ART adherence. We also interviewed
6 UARTO research assistants. Both direct and indirect content analysis were used to interpret interview transcripts.
We found that monitoring created a sense of pressure to adhere to ART, which some participants described as “forcing”
them to adhere. However, even participants who felt that monitoring forced them to take medications perceived using the
EAM as conducive to their fundamental goal of high ART adherence. Overall, even if monitoring may have limited participants’
effective freedom to be non-adherent, participants welcomed any such effect. No participant rejected the EAM on the
grounds that it would limit that effective freedom. Reports that monitoring altered behaviors unrelated to pill-taking were
rare. Researchers should continue to be vigilant about the ways in which behavioral health monitoring affects autonomy, but
should also recognize that even autonomy-limiting monitoring strategies may enable participants to achieve their own goals.
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