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DETERMINANT FACTORS ASSOCIATED WITH TIME TO DEATH OF HIV/AIDS PATIENTS IN DEBRE TABOR REFERAL HOSPITAL: AN APPLICATION OFACCELERATED FAILURE TIME SHARED FRAILTY MODELS

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dc.contributor.author KENAW, DEREBE
dc.date.accessioned 2020-09-08T07:36:22Z
dc.date.available 2020-09-08T07:36:22Z
dc.date.issued 2020-09-07
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/11189
dc.description.abstract Abstract Antiretroviral Treatment (ART) can help people from becoming ill for many years and this has improved the survival of HIV patients. In Ethiopia about 690,000 people and globally more than 23.3 million people have been taking ART until the end of 2018. Scaling up of ART treatment is planned by WHO and the Ministry of Health of the Ethiopian government. Although ART treatment has decreased HIV associated mortality and morbidity, a number of patients still die after the start of ART. The study is designed to identify determinant factors (demographic and health related) that affect the survival of HIV-infected patients in Debre Tabor referral hospital with an application of parametric shared frailty models. The data were collected from the medical chart of HIV/AIDS patients under ART follow-up from January 2015 up to December 2019. A sample of 351 patients has been taken from Debre Tabor referral hospital ART clinic for the study. The gamma and inverse Gaussian shared frailty with exponential, Weibull, lognormal and log-logistic baseline models was employed to analyze risk factors associated with time to death of HIV/AIDS patients. All the fitted models were compared by using AIC and BIC. Out of the total, about 24.8% of patients were died and 75.2% censored. The median time of HIV/AIDS patients was 17 months. The Weibull with Gamma shared frailty model had minimum value of AIC when compared with other models for HIV/AIDS dataset. The clustering effect (residence) was significant for modeling the determinants of time-to-death dataset. Based on the result of Weibull-Gamma shared frailty model, marital status, occupation, education level, opportunistic infection disease, TB-coinfected, weight, WHO stages, CD4 cell count and age were found to be the most significant determinants for time to death of HIV/AIDS patients. Key words: HIV/AIDS, death, survival analysis, accelerated failure time, frailty model en_US
dc.language.iso en_US en_US
dc.subject STATISTICS en_US
dc.title DETERMINANT FACTORS ASSOCIATED WITH TIME TO DEATH OF HIV/AIDS PATIENTS IN DEBRE TABOR REFERAL HOSPITAL: AN APPLICATION OFACCELERATED FAILURE TIME SHARED FRAILTY MODELS en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US


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