Original Research

Differentiated antiretroviral distribution: Implementation in five South African districts

Justin Engelbrecht, Chandbi Tajeer, Cara O’Connor, Kate Rees
African Journal of Primary Health Care & Family Medicine | Vol 17, No 1 | a4974 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/phcfm.v17i1.4974 | © 2025 Justin Engelbrecht, Chandbi Tajeer, Cara O’Connor, Kate Rees | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 12 March 2025 | Published: 27 August 2025

About the author(s)

Justin Engelbrecht, Anova Health Institute, Johannesburg, South Africa
Chandbi Tajeer, Anova Health Institute, Johannesburg, South Africa
Cara O’Connor, Anova Health Institute, Johannesburg, South Africa
Kate Rees, Anova Health Institute, Johannesburg, South Africa; and Department of Community Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa

Abstract

Background: The National Department of Health introduced Differentiated Service Delivery (DSD) models to improve retention in care and decongest healthcare facilities. Anova Health Institute supported the implementation of DSD guidelines in five districts of South Africa.
Aim: The study aimed to describe how the models contained in DSD policies are operationalised.
Setting: Five districts of South Africa – two metropolitan, two mixed and one rural.
Methods: We used a mixed-methods approach, incorporating a 2-day participatory workshop in 2023 and a retrospective review of routine programmatic data. A mapping exercise was used to understand all models of chronic medication provision in the five study districts and to describe differences in operationalisation. We also report on the number of options per facility and healthcare provider perspectives of benefits and limitations.
Results: External and facility pick-up points were the most commonly implemented models. Three key themes were: the trade-off between convenience and additional support, the trade-off between controlling client care and outsourcing tasks and the distribution of work between cadres of staff. Sedibeng District provided the most options per facility, with 57% of facilities having three possible options. Cape Town provided the fewest, with 50% of facilities offering only one option.
Conclusion: Health and environmental contexts guide the choice of DSD modalities offered. It is possible to offer clients options in South African settings.
Contribution: This study highlights the context-specific nature of DSD model implementation and the importance of client choice. Further research into availability and options from a client perspective would be useful.


Keywords

differentiated service delivery; antiretroviral therapy; differentiated models of care; HIV; CCMDD

Sustainable Development Goal

Goal 3: Good health and well-being

Metrics

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Total article views: 2017

 

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