Participant characteristics
Twenty participants were interviewed; 10 experts and 10 frontline health workers. The experts or key informants included national and international HIV policy makers and researchers while the frontline health workers included three PHC clinic managers and seven PHC clinic nurses. The majority of interviewees were female (n = 16, 80%), with an age range of 29–61 years (mean age 45 years) (Table 2).
Themes and categories
The key themes that emerged from interviews were grouped into seven categories. These categories were then mapped onto three components of the adapted CAS framework, organised by the occurrence of events throughout PMTCT rollout during and after AIDS denialism. They were classified as: “system” (experiences in trials and PMTCT adoption during AIDS denialism era); “adaptive” (gradual move towards PMTCT acceptance and integration, increased awareness and community participation, commitment to PMTCT services integration, community health workers’ involvement, clinical training and retraining for nurses) and “complex” (persistent barriers to PMTCT integration). This classification with illustrative quotes is depicted in Table 3.
Table 3
Key findings based on proposed CAS components
CAS component and key findings | Illustrative quotes |
System 1. Experiences in PMTCT trials during after AIDS denialism era | “We had to get special permission to roll out the programme, and… when there was a court instruction to roll it out; but then they were still controlling the roll-out and we were all, like, pilot projects” – Expert 2. “I think over the years what has happened is the pressure on the ground that has resulted in people changing their perspective and focus around PMTCT” – Expert 1. “I’m just thinking back now, in general and for Cape Town in particular,…So basically, we received global funding, and in 2006, we appointed quite a number of PMTCT coordinators, as well as PMTCT registered professional nurses within the PHC setting…” – Expert 4. “It was only AZT and Nevirapine that was given at that time. Then as time goes by then we changed” – FHCW 1. “.....she started to run the PMTCT programme about 15 years ago, lots of patients were lost before that and statistics were quite high when it came to PCRs. They weren’t followed up appropriately. So, I think after the PMTCT programme started, there was somebody actually taking charge, invested in the patient’s wellbeing, and they were being followed up, and if any other issues arose besides PMTCT, it could also be managed more appropriately and be referred” – FHCW 2. “I believe there was a problem with a theft on medication. As a result now, the nurses that are doing ANC, they don’t dispense medication” – FHCW 3. |
Adaptive 2. Commitment to PMTCT integration 3. Gradual move towards PMTCT acceptance and integration in the clinics 4. Increased awareness and community participation 5. Community health workers’ involvement 6. Clinical training and retraining for nurses | “And in some settings, actually referring the patient involved having them moving from the facility to another to obtain the care for other conditions; and you’ve got to think of integration in terms of, at least, the making available within the same facility of other services” – Expert 6. “…transferring clients to specialists may cause gaps and some women become missing, even for a short distance…, they disappear within 50 meters to where you send them. They fall in hole in that walk and with this we can’t defragment the system” – Expert 10. “It’s a logical move for midwives and other health workers who are working in maternity, antenatal, and postnatal and delivery services to treat mothers who are infected with HIV in a holistic way” – Expert 3. “It’s quite good, because we try to integrate services…..So we do the PCRs when the mothers are here for immunisation, I mean, it can be sooner done at once” – FHCW 3. “You want your baby to be immunised here; then we don’t want you to go up and down, you must also be here and your baby, so that we can see both of you ….But the mother and the baby must be on the same facility” FHCW 4. “…because they see mother and child, then they also check which medication did the child get, or is the child a high risk infant or not? Does the mother still remain in care? All those check ups, PAP smears, they also check immunisations, deworming, nutrition,…everything possible” – FHCW 5. “…PMTCT figures almost synonymous with antenatal care, because the chances of being HIV infected are so high, relatively, that you almost don’t see one without the other” – Expert 8. “So most of our nurses, our midwives are now trained, so which means they’re offering integrated antenatal and antiretroviral treatment (PMTCT) and they’re also doing TB screening” – Expert 4. “Western Cape was the only province to start integration of PMTCT and other ANC services and others did the same later. Different stakeholders used to meet once per week to discuss the progress and issues and everyone came together to assess how it was managed” – Expert 9. “The community is more open-minded now of what is expected of them once they are pregnant…So, it was an eye-opener, also for the nurses, because and the community as well; because now they know, once they are pregnant, they are eager to know their status” – FHCW 6. “…within the facility, it’s now good that we realised that there is a need for that continuity of care…..when we started this project of Child Health” – FHCW 1. “I can say one in five years, we have only one child, one in five years that is positive. She didn’t come to the clinic when she was pregnant, and yet she was positive. You see, it can take one in five years for one child due to PMTCT; and we are not happy with that” – FHCW 4. “It has so many adverse consequences affecting key public health indicators, such as maternal and under five and infant mortality, that it became a priority health problem for the health services to solve” – Expert 3. “…bringing HIV care back to the community, now increasingly having what they call community-based club, and you are going to see for instance more room for those people, to deal with more urgent issues, because they are overcrowded” – Expert 6. “….community support also plays a key role in supporting moms throughout this whole cascade. Peer support is important” – Expert 10. “We have got programmes like MomConnect where they are enrolled and they get all the support, like where they are sent sms’s and stuff” – FHCW 6. “Mothers to Mothers services which is well supporting the mothers who are pregnant and those after delivery, so they work hand in hand with antenatal labour ward as well as Child Health for continuity of care” FHCW 1. “So, when we talk to them we get the social worker involved as well, then we will try and make a plan to see if there are not other family members because, I mean, any support, it doesn’t just have to be the partner, support in general is good” – FHCW 2. “CHWs are part of health care system to link clinics to the communities and enforce adherence among their other roles. They need to be trained” – Expert 9. “…if they were in place, in many communities, it would be relatively easy to send a message to those community health workers and teams” – Expert 3. “They (CHWs) can go to the houses and they can reinforce adherence…and the idea is that they go into that household and look at all the problems. They look at the teenagers, they counsel them about contraception, and look at the mother that’s struggling with breastfeeding and at the father that’s smoking” – Expert 5. “I will say they are helpful, because we use them as the bridge just to get to the communities, because they go the extra mile in this way that they go inside those houses; then they will go there and give talk…So we work hand in hand with them” – FHCW 7. “…but mostly our community health workers are working with TB and HIV,… Only if, for example, we need to recall our babies for immunisation…. then they will recall those mothers for us. When we are doing some bloods screening and there is an abnormality, they can’t get that person from the phone, and then somebody has to go and do a home visit ” – FHCW 3. “After delivery, CHWs maybe they visit them (women) at home” – FHCW 8. “We trained nurses and they are delivering ART and none believed that in those days, training changes everything….” – Expert 10. “…When everyone diagnosed with HIV was to be initiated to treatment and nurses had to be train on ART initiation. NIMART was created and trained them” – Expert 9. “We said that the NIMART nurse who’s got a dispensing licence can also dispense the medication in the MOU, to make sure that the mom gets more of an integrated service…” – Expert 4. “In South Africa, for special training, they have to do the NIMART training, and then they can dispense the drugs and look after the patients and the counselling…” – Expert 5. “We wanted all the midwives to be NIMART trained, so they would be able to initiate, so they don’t send the patients from pillar to post. Then they get tired and don’t start their medication because they must wait in other queues” – FHCW 1. “….just to send the staff to the trainings on PMTCT, on BANC….yes, I see who is running short, so that I send them for training through NIMART training programme” – FHCW 4. “I do BANC and most of the time… I don’t have the HIV course, so I must run around and asking those sisters there for my patients all the time; and if they would send me for HIV training that would be resolved” – FHCW 8. “…because, the staff have to be trained, and especially on the PMTCT guidelines when they change again, so, they change a lot and there should be uniformity” – FHCW 3. |
Complex 7. Persistent barriers to PMTCT integration | “If we have an electronic system that talks to each other and the patient has got a single number, we can track her…it’s not installed in all the computers and not everyone is trained how to use it...Other health problems like Hypertension is not integrated into the PMTCT services” – Expert 5. “I think that there was resistance to change. I remember there was a time, just before we introduced the same day initiation. When we spoke to nurses about it, they said it’s impossible, we can’t do it; and so there are attitudinal issues and they needed support and training and encouragement. So people don’t really want to change necessarily, but when it’s policy, you say, well we don’t have a choice” – Expert 7. “Some mothers book late, and so don’t benefit from the services available. Other mothers convert after they’ve been initially tested and they’re especially at high risk, so identifying and getting the mothers onto treatment is one of the big challenges; and then keeping mothers adherent is another challenge” – Expert 3. “We wanted all the midwives to be NIMART trained, so they would be able to initiate, so they don’t send the patients from pillar to post. Then they get tired and don’t start their medication because they must wait in other queues” – FHCW 1. “…for stigma purpose, because they know in our communities if you breastfeed then you are regarded as negative….So we have that challenge, breastfeeding for two weeks then stop, swap to formula feeding” – FHCW 7. “I believe there was a problem with a theft on medication. As a result now, the nurses that are doing ANC, they don’t dispense medication. So now those mothers, they queue twice” – FHCW 3. “Our waiting area is very congested. We don’t even separate them, you know, like kids as such and mothers…, and also there’s poor ventilation in there,… and then they come here and actually, those kids may leave this place more sicker” – FHCW 3. |
The following section discusses the results and demonstrates the sequence and complexity of integrating PMTCT services within PHC in South Africa.
1. Experiences in PMTCT trials and its adoption during AIDS denialism era
From the perspectives of HIV experts who were involved in the initial PMTCT trials, during the era of AIDs denialism, doctors and the other health care professionals, community groups and activists representing people living with HIV were the first to push for access to HIV treatment. These early actors in the campaign for treatment for mothers and children had tremendous and diverse experiences of how PMTCT was rolled-out during and after AIDS denialism. Several experts interviewed had participated in the design and implementation of PMTCT in local pilot sites. FHCWs interviewed had not been involved in the early stage of PMTCT rollout.
Experts, who to some extent played a key role in advocacy for HIV treatment or against AIDS denialism, recalled the introduction of PMTCT. The majority discussed how unsupportive the Department of Health (DoH) was, and the difficulty in obtaining approvals at local clinics. Six experts who were involved in the initial PMTCT trials in South Africa described how the PMTCT intervention was vertically rolled-out in selected pilot sites prior to and following the constitutional court ruling in August 2002.
“In South Africa, when we started the PMTCT Programme, it was really a programme implemented in 18 pilot sites, and then based on a court order, we had to scale it up nationally, and at that time, it was very much a vertical programme” – Expert 1.
Though campaigns to prevent MTCT had legal support, it took time for the DoH and all health care providers to fully cooperate with the teams that were delivering HIV interventions. Researchers and activists who were involved in the scaling-up of PMTCT interventions recounted how they personally sought support from health care providers, clinic committees and from pregnant women involved. Bringing together these different groups of stakeholders was essential in gaining support for implementing complex interventions such as PMTCT:
“We would first meet with the clinic… Every clinic had a clinic board made up of lay people and community leaders in that district; and so, the first strategy was you get those people to be on your side” – Expert 2.
In contrast, the majority of the FHCWs knew very little about how PMTCT services were first implemented into PHC in South Africa. One clinic manager assumed that PMTCT had been integrated from the beginning.
“It’s always been integrated, so I don’t want to say something that I don’t have experience of. I don’t want to talk based on assumptions” – FHCW 1.
Another clinic manager who worked at the pilot site was unable to recall what happened when PMTCT services were offered for the first time in her facility. Like others with the same experience, stories were short, imprecise and with few details on how PMTCT services were initiated and later integrated into PHC.
“We started by piloting it in 1999. We were the pilot site. I must try to think now where I was working in that time of the PMTCT; because I remember these babies, they were HIV affected. You know, it was that way.…. We didn’t even have registers, at that time, because we didn’t even know how big the problem was at the time” – FHCW 2.
2. Gradual move towards PMTCT acceptance and integration in the clinics
Most experts involved in this study reported that they were among the teams of researchers and activists that were pioneering this intervention and worked to mobilise buy-in and support for PMTCT at an individual and organisational levels. They opposed the government’s stand, and worked with clinic boards and community leaders in every district for the acceptance and initiation of PMTCT, as illustrated in the following quote:
“It was in the beginning of AIDS denialism, and so the way we entered into the clinic, was we would first meet with the clinic board, and if the clinic board says, we sanction this, it’s very hard for the clinic staff not to allow you into the hospital” – Expert 2.
According to the experts who witnessed the whole evolution of PMTCT scale-up in South Africa, despite the Constitutional Court ruling in favour of PMTCT rollout, research teams, activists and non-government organisations (NGOs) continued to face challenges in efforts to implement the intervention in most of the provinces. Those championing the rollout encountered resistance from FHCWs who worried about HIV transmission to themselves and that the intervention would add to already heavy workloads. Meanwhile, HIV-related health care needs were increasing in the country, especially among pregnant women attending clinics for antenatal care, which put healthcare workers under increasing pressure to respond. Health care research teams were also inspired by the civic-minded attitude of those women who willingly participated in early PMTCT trials to support efforts to rollout services to more women. These women were hailed as champions:
“… When there was a court instruction to roll it [PMTCT] out; we were all, like, pilot projects. We were doing rollouts, but it was always very controlled…. it was a placebo-controlled study, and the women said to us, “we don’t mind being on placebo, as long as you promise us that if this drug works, you will roll it out, and you will give it to all other [women]… So, we will sacrifice ourselves for the future women”. So we promised the women that if it worked, we would do whatever it took to make sure that other women in their situation [received the intervention]…” – Expert 2.
All FHCWs interviewed spoke unreservedly about the benefits of the PMTCT programme, reporting that they had progressively embraced new initiatives and expressed their full support for PMTCT integration into PHC services. They saw how PMTCT integration at a facility level helped to deliver services to community, and how this had become crucial for the successful delivery of other services for maternal and child health. A researcher who participated in PMTCT rollout from the very beginning and a manager working at the PHC level discussed how integration of PMTCT services in local health facilities benefited other services.
“..Mother to child transmission is such a big problem. It has so many adverse consequences affecting key public health indicators, such as maternal and under five and infant mortality, that it became a priority health problem for the health services to solve. So the natural home for PMTCT is within the main stream services” – Expert 6.
“With the integration, it’s the best thing that ever happened, and also where we are now, compared to ten years ago, it’s like a big improvement; from the infection perspective-wise, of cross-infection and stuff, from mother to child” – FHCW 1.
Despite strong support from women and FHCWs, the rollout faced a number of challenges. Addressing HIV related stigma and increasing programme acceptance required support from community-based NGOs. NGOs included those with a special focus on treatment like Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) and those with activism and advocacy aims like Treatment Action Campaign (TAC). Experts and FHCWs who worked with NGOs on a daily basis in their local facilities, praised them as key players in PMTCT intervention acceptability, in retaining women, or in boosting support from families of women attending PMTCT with their babies after delivery. Four FHCWs and three experts discussed how NGOs have helped from the very beginning - from awareness campaigns, assisting in the training of lay health workers and equipping clinics, as well as providing support and follow-up with women in their communities. NGOs using community health workers (CHWs) and lay counselors continue to play a vital role in working with national health department to reinforce governmental initiatives dealing with MTCT and increasing women retention.
“…So it has improved a lot based on other NPOs [non-profit organisational staff] that assist us if we have a problem when we can’t find, a patient, then mothers trace them, or the NPOs trace them” – FHCW 3.
3. Commitment to PMTCT services integration
Participants discussed knowledge of health care services integration and their experience in the process of integrating PMTCT cascades in PHC. Experts considered PMTCT integration as the ‘right process’ to bring together clinical activities. All experts believed that PMTCT fitted well within other maternal and child health (MCH) services and felt that it had been smoothly integrated into other available services in the clinics such as tuberculosis treatment, sexually transmitted infections and mental health services.
“It’s linking better with the MCH programmes… On the ground, I think, at facility level, there always is integration” – Expert 1.
FHCWs who had been involved in service delivery at the clinics understood how challenging it had been to integrate various services in their facilities. However, they recognised the importance of PMTCT integration in daily service provision at the clinics. In striving to deliver a package of comprehensive services, PMTCT became the core component among the services offered at their local facilities. For example, one of the FHCWs shared how she worked to ensure all services were integrated for the convenience of women.
“So, what I did, I tried to integrate everything, and to make sure that whoever is working here is going to give a one-stop-shop… They [the woman] are going to get all the services they are supposed to get, instead of going there and there and there” – FHCW 1.
4. Increased awareness and community participation
In addition to combined efforts from both national and provincial health systems, local authorities and NGOs to increase PMTCT awareness, community involvement was also essential to increasing uptake and sustainability of the programme. PMTCT mobilisation and integration campaigns have therefore included community-members to share first-hand messages and experiences to peers, relatives and neighbours and ensure the intervention is widely known and accepted. The following two groups were, based on our interviews, identified to have carried out important advocacy and treatment messages about PMTCT and boosted its successful implementation: mothers-to-mothers, and male partners of women who accessed PMTCT.
Mother-to-mother services
Barriers to accessing services, treatment initiation and adherence to it, were acknowledged by both experts and FHCWs. Mother-to-mother (M2M) was perceived as the core peer-support organisation to offer services that helped to address these challenges. First initiated and registered as an NGO partnering with other governmental, multilateral and individual organisations, M2M started in South Africa employing trained mothers living with HIV to provide psychosocial support to pregnant women and mothers of babies diagnosed with HIV, to promote retention and to encourage disclosure (53). Strong support for mother-to-mother’ initiatives was expressed by both experts and FHCWs:
“Mother-to-mother initiatives have been fantastic for making sure moms come back and take the medication…community support also plays a key role in supporting moms throughout this whole cascade. Peer support is important” – Expert 3.
“Mothers to Mothers services which are supporting the HIV mothers who are pregnant and those after delivery, work hand in hand with antenatal labour ward as well as Child Health for continuity of care” – FHCW 3.
Participants also discussed how the M2M peer support group meetings were forums in which women discussed appropriate solutions in responding to HIV infection in their communities, as well as issues they experience, such as difficulties with treatment adherence, social support and poverty.
Male involvement in PMTCT
Active involvement of males in supporting pregnant women living with HIV was regarded as important by both experts and FHCW. However, experts described how antenatal and postnatal health services in the country are ‘womanised’ - a situation that did not foster male involvement in services. Both experts and FHCWs emphasized the need for more efforts to bring in partners to services to improve PMTCT.
“Male integration is something else we didn’t do well and it needs to be improved a bit…and our health services are female oriented and male staff and partners of our women clients are to (should) be more involved” – Expert 3.
FHCWs found male support and collaboration difficult to gain:
“Other contributions were involving other… allowing people to be involved from outside, especially the men, because our African men don’t go to antenatal….to promote the partners to come with” – FHCW 3.
5. Community health workers’ involvement
While there is a long history of CHW involvement in PHC, the advent of HIV and of treatment for HIV and tuberculosis in South Africa led to a major increase in the numbers and visibility of CHWs such as lay counsellors. Many were employed by NGOs and funded by external donors but working in close collaboration with public health facilities (54,55). For experts, CHWs were a cornerstone for linking communities and health systems, addressing stigma and discrimination at family and community level, and for supporting medication adherence. They emphasised the need to establish or enhance community-based services (CBS) with CHWs engagement and full collaboration with health systems.
“They (CHWs) are more available than other health workers in the clinics.…and if you go back to the HIV story again, I mean, using CHWs is all about bringing HIV care back to the community as they are in charge of what they call community-based club,…. and this gives more room for those nurses and others in clinics to deal with more urgent issues, because they are overcrowded now. It (the club) gives them that repeated contact and a lot of those redundant tasks can obviously be shifted nicely to a community health worker who is trained and accessible, and then that eases the pressure on the clinic” – Expert 4.
Experts valued the contributions of CHWs, especially in responding to HIV and in facilitating PMTCT implementation. Increased training and appropriate payments for CHWs were suggested by experts, to ensure that they are motivated and are able to support communities in partnership with local health facilities. Experts experience was that, despite intentions that NGOs provide adequate training, supervision and payment, this was done so inconsistently.
“That systems of peers and CHWs, they need to be properly trained and paid, that’s my opinion…When they are trained and offer their services, they have to be paid” – Expert 3.
FHCWs also recognised the importance of CHWs at different fronts to link local health facilities and the communities. Three FHCWs stated they had reservations about the involvement of CHWs but acknowledged that they are useful in ensuring follow-up of women and continuous PCR testing and immunisation for babies. Some CHWs were thought not to have the required education to support community members. This meant that continuous training and supervision by the designated clinic nurse or midwife was required to ensure that the right information and quality services were delivered by CHWs as suggested by one clinic manager:
“….because I need first somebody to train them, or maybe somebody senior to them to listen to what they are saying, because people they start to ask questions. We also see that as an option and then some of them don’t even have grade 12, so, those kinds of things. So we try to control it…” – FHCW 2.
However, most FHCWs described collaboration with CHWs as critical to the success of the PMTCT programme and facilitating its reach into the surrounding communities. CHWs supported the delivery of health education for a range of health issues, located mothers for appointments if they could not be reached via phone and organised HIV/AIDS support groups at antenatal clinics.
“I will say they are helpful, because we use them as the bridge just to get to the communities, because they go the extra mile in this way that they go inside those houses; then they will go there and give talk…So we work hand in hand with them” – FHCW 5.
6. Clinical training and retraining for nurses
Given the challenge of doctors providing treatment to a large number of people living with HIV, South Africa has adopted a decentralised approach, allowing other health professionals to prescribe treatment. The Nurse Initiated and Managed Anti-Retroviral Therapy (NIMART) training programme was established as an effective task-shifting strategy, following the conclusion of the Streamlining Tasks and Roles to Expand Treatment and Care for HIV (STRETCH) study in South Africa in 2010 by Fairall L. et al. (56). Its role was to train nurses to not only test HIV, but prescribe ART support to pregnant women living with HIV. It was regarded as successful by both experts and FHCWs but they described several challenges in the roll out of this programme. The shortage of NIMART trained nurses and midwives was thought to result in high workload for those trained and was linked to long waiting hours in the queues and poor-quality services.
“Well, I think in the facilities where you’ve got enough NIMART trained nurses, there isn’t a problem…” – Expert 5.
“We wanted all the midwives to be NIMART trained, so they would be able to initiate, so they don’t send the patients from pillar to post. Then they get tired and don’t start their medication because they must wait in other queues” – FHCW 3.
“Because I do BANC [basic antenatal care] and most of the time… I don’t have the HIV course, so I must run around and asking those sisters there for my patients all the time; if they would send me for HIV, then it’s going to be okay…” – FHCW 6.
Frequent changes in PMTCT and ART guidelines also presented challenges in ensuring all staff members understood and were implementing updated guidelines.
“I think it is still challenging, particularly when we have to implement new guidelines, because we’ve got to go through a whole process of training and retraining. And the trouble is with the whole HIV and PMTCT field, is evidence evolves and guidelines change rapidly or consecutively in close succession, so we need to keep retraining groups of people” – Expert 1.
In particular, several experts and FHCWs mentioned changes in the guidelines about breastfeeding. While HIV mothers were previously recommended to formula feed, mothers who have a supressed viral load are now being asked to breastfeed consistently. This has resulted in confusion for both staff members and mothers.
“The other challenge was consistent messaging, because you know, different people were saying different things, and there was a lot of confusion about infant feeding” – Expert 1.
7. Persistent barriers to PMTCT integration
Like other complex health programmes, PMTCT rollout has faced challenges in South Africa (Table 4). Experts mentioned attitudinal issues from facility-based health care workers and lack of accountability and bureaucracy at all levels of management in the health system. They also discussed how poor communication and inconsistencies in the fidelity to the clinical algorithm and practice guidelines reduced the overall quality of care, in some facilities.
Table 4
Persistent barriers to PMTCT integration
According to experts | Common to both experts and FHCWs | According to FHCWs |
• Bureaucratic slowness • Lack of managerial accountability • Poor quality of care including suboptimal fidelity to algorithms • Poor training of staff • Attitudinal issues • Discrimination, stigma • Lack of national • Lack of heath information systems and issues relating to electronic records | • Loss to follow-up • Socio-economic issues for women • Women migration • Lack of unique patient identifiers • Resistance to change | • Small working spaces and other infrastructure related challenges like poor ventilation, congestion, etc,. • Shortage and work overload • High staff turnover • Guideline changes • Too much paperwork for managers |
“I think it’s due to a lack of accountability and a lack of good management at all levels…And currently, there’s no great communication between primary level and hospital level generally, referral both ways” – Expert 6.
Experts suggested that a single health information system has the potential to improve efficiency in patient identification, follow up and reporting and take its integration to a new stage.
“So, we know patients are nomadic… we need linked electronic patient records, and the problem is for HIV care for example in this city, they have three different systems” – Expert 5.
FHCWs also expressed frustration regarding the lack of communication between clinics and their referral hospitals and the lack of a national-wide system of unique identifiers for all patients.
“If we transfer them, they must take over everything, but the problem is, if the patient went to a hospital, even if she went to our Khayelitsha District hospital, if they give them medication there, it doesn’t appear, because we don’t know where they captured them. So they appear to us as defaulters, up until we must phone them” – FHCW 8.
FHCWs discussed how their heavy workload, inadequate training, staff shortages and high staff turnover affect the quality and outcomes of service delivery in their health settings.
“It was not all smooth sailing, due to staff turnover…..I had, like almost, six, seven nurses who were basic antenatal care [BANC] trained, who can do all for the pregnant mother… from the time that their patient is pregnant until the baby is born, and still look after the baby, but then with the staff turnover, they left and it was tough, terrible! I’ve got only two people who are BANC trained, and these people, it’s not like the only thing that they must do. They were doing other things as well, and not only focussing on this [PMTCT]” – FHCW 1.