Organization and Integration of Care in the HIV-Non-Communicable Disease Syndemic: A Rapid Scoping Review.

Advances in antiretroviral therapy have transformed infection with HIV into a manageable chronic disease, increasing the survival of people living with HIV, who are also undergoing a demographic aging process marked by the emergence of non-communicable chronic diseases. This study aims to map and analyze how the scientific literature addresses the organization and integration of care in the HIV-NCD syndemic, identifying implications for nursing and for health systems. This is a Rapid Scoping Review, using the databases PubMed, Scopus, CINAHL, and LILACS. Data synthesis was conducted using Microsoft Excel. The research was structured using the PCC framework: Population-people living with HIV (≥18 years); Concept-organization and integration of care in the HIV-NCD syndemic, including care models, care coordination, service integration, and the role of nursing; and Context-health services and systems. Twenty-three studies were included, most of which used qualitative methodology, were conducted in sub-Saharan Africa, and had predominantly female samples. This study demonstrated that the organization of care in the HIV-NCD syndemic remains predominantly characterized by fragmented models, which are insufficient to address the complexity of multimorbidity. Integrated care models emerge as a promising strategy; however, their effects remain limited in settings marked by health inequalities.
Non-Communicable Diseases
Access
Care/Management

Authors

Costa Costa, Targino Targino, Ludugerio Ludugerio, de Medeiros de Medeiros, Piuvezam Piuvezam, da Silva da Silva
View on Pubmed
Share
Facebook
X (Twitter)
Bluesky
Linkedin
Copy to clipboard