A systematic review of task- shifting for HIV treatment and care in Africa
University of Toronto · University of Cape Town · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Shortages of human resources for health (HRH) have severely hampered the rollout of antiretroviral therapy (ART) in sub-Saharan Africa. Current rollout models are hospital- and physician-intensive. Task shifting, or delegating tasks performed by physicians to staff with lower-level qualifications, is considered a means of expanding rollout in resource-poor or HRH-limited settings.
We conducted a systematic literature review. Medline, the Cochrane library, the Social Science Citation Index, and the South African National Health Research Database were searched with the following terms: task shift*, balance of care, non-physician clinicians, substitute health care worker, community care givers, primary healthcare teams, cadres, and nurs* HIV. We mined bibliographies and corresponded with authors for further results. Grey literature was searched online, and conference proceedings searched for abstracts.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 65.31
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 55
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Health services research
- Health care
- MEDLINE
- Delegation
- Health administration
- Family medicine
- Cochrane Library
- No poverty