Quality of life of HIV+ patients undergoing pharmacotherapeutic follow-up

Authors

  • Catarine Vitor Loureiro Federal University of Ceará; Centre of Studies in Pharmaceutical Care; Research Group on Pharmaceutical Care
  • Henry Pablo Lopes Campos e Reis Federal University of Ceará; Centre of Studies in Pharmaceutical Care; Research Group on Pharmaceutical Care
  • Karla do Nascimento Magalhães José de Alencar Medical Specialties Center
  • Cristiane Policarpo Carmo José de Alencar Medical Specialties Center
  • Francisca Ana Maria Leite José de Alencar Medical Specialties Center
  • Ana Cláudia de Brito Passos José de Alencar Medical Specialties Center; Drug Information Center
  • Paulo Yuri Milen Firmino Federal University of Ceará; Centre of Studies in Pharmaceutical Care; Research Group on Pharmaceutical Care
  • Nadir Kheir Qatar University
  • David John Woods Otago University; School of Pharmacy
  • Ângela Maria de Souza Ponciano Federal University of Ceará; Centre of Studies in Pharmaceutical Care; Research Group on Pharmaceutical Care
  • Marta Maria de França Fonteles Federal University of Ceará; Centre of Studies in Pharmaceutical Care; Research Group on Pharmaceutical Care

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S1984-82502012000400015

Keywords:

Pharmacotherapeutic follow-up^i1^sinflue, Pharmacotherapeutic follow-up^i1^squality of l, HIV patients^i1^squality of l, Pharmaceutical care

Abstract

The influence of pharmacotherapeutic follow-up (PTF) on quality of life was evaluated in 45 HIV+ patients, who were undergoing initial antiretroviral therapy at a specialized care center in northeast Brazil. PTF lasted nine months and quality of life was analyzed at the 1st and 9th meetings using a questionnaire validated for Brazil. The study identified 643 problems related to antiretrovirals and there were 590 pharmaceutical interventions during the PTF. The comparative analysis between the results of the 1st and the 9th meeting was statistically significant for all domains of the questionnaire. For asymptomatic patients, only one domain was statistically significant. For symptomatic patients, six domains were significant. Patients with one year of HIV/AIDS diagnosis had statistically significant differences in five domains. The results suggest that the PTF contributed to improving quality of life, particularly for symptomatic patients and those diagnosed for at least one year - important target groups for Pharmaceutical Treatment.

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Published

2012-12-01

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Quality of life of HIV+ patients undergoing pharmacotherapeutic follow-up . (2012). Brazilian Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 48(4), 711-718. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1984-82502012000400015