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14 Mar 2008 02:21:36 | Dr Deryck Pattron, Ph.D.
What is the significance of HIV/AIDS? •HIV has infected more
than 60 million people worldwide. Each day, approximately 14,000
new infections occur, more than half of them among young people
below age 25. •At the end of 2002 of over 42 million people
living with HIV/AIDS, of whom 30 percent were co-infected with
tuberculosis. •Over 95 percent of people living with HIV/AIDS
are in low and middle-income countries. •More than 20 million
have died from AIDS, 3 million in 2002 alone. •AIDS is now the
leading cause of death in Sub-Saharan Africa and the
fourth-biggest killer globally. •The epidemic has cut life
expectancy by more than 10 years in several nations. •HIV/AIDS
is not just a public health problem. Once generalized, the
epidemic has far reaching consequences to all social sectors and
to development itself. It can decimate the workforce, create
large numbers of orphans, exacerbate poverty and inequality, and
put tremendous pressure on health and social services. Annual
basic care and treatment for a person with AIDS, even without
antiretroviral drugs, can cost as much as 2-3 times per capita
gross domestic product in the poorest countries. HIV/AIDS
already causes a measurable fall in annual per capita growth in
the hardest-hit countries of Sub-Saharan Africa and threatens to
reverse their development achievements of the last 50 years.
How much will it cost? Economic analyses show that prevention of
mother-to-child-transmission is cost effective, with costs well
below US$100 per healthy life year gained. But cost-benefit and
cost-effectiveness are highly context-specific and will be
influenced by HIV prevalence and distribution, and the rate of
uptake of mother-to-child-transmission interventions. Prices of
anti-retroviral drugs used to prevent
mother-to-child-transmission range from US$ 0-4 for nevirapine
and up to US$ 300 for a short course of zidovudine. Costs for
replacement feeding range from US$ 50 to US$ 300 for a period of
six months depending on the country. Typically, about 90% of
total mother-to-child-transmission program cost is in setting up
services, including training, and strengthening health
infrastructure.
How does HIV/AIDS spread? The major modes of transmission of
AIDS are: •Sexual intercourse. •Unsafe injecting practices.
•Mother-to-child (in utero, during birth or through
breastfeeding). •Transfusion of contaminated blood or blood
products. •Heterosexual transmission accounts for more than 70%
of all HIV infections worldwide. •Certain groups are more likely
to contract and spread HIV, such as commercial sex workers; men
who have sex with men and highly mobile workers. HIV/AIDS is
initially concentrated in these groups who engage in high-risk
behavior, and then spills over into the wider population. Can
HIV/AIDS be brought under control in developing countries?
Developing countries populations are particularly susceptible to
HIV/AIDS because of inadequate funding, unfavourable policy
environments and lack of popular support. Despite the high
potential of HIV/AIDS in developing countries such as Thailand,
Uganda and Brazil, there are some success stories in the fight
against HIV/AIDS on national scale among developing countries.
For example, Thailand has reduced annual new HIV infections from
140,000 a decade ago to 30,000 in 2001.
This is strong evidence that the epidemic can be subdued in
developing countries. The potential exists to prevent extensive
new infections despite the severity of the global pandemic,
therefore, the international community has set the target of
reducing HIV prevalence among 15-24 year-olds by 25% in the most
affected countries by 2005 and globally by 2010.
Choosing interventions Choosing the right mix of interventions
for implementation is very important in a setting with limited
resources and implementation capacity. An appropriate balance
among prevention, treatment, care and mitigation should be based
on: •Specific epidemiology of HIV/AIDS, including who are at
risk and stage of the epidemic. •Cost-effectiveness of
interventions. •Level of public resources available.
•Implementation capacity. •Extent to which intervention is a
"public good".
What are the effective interventions to prevent HIV/AIDS? No
cure or effective vaccine has yet been developed, but the tools
to prevent HIV infection already exist. AIDS is a fatal disease,
but modern interventions can prolong and improve the lives of
patients afflicted with HIV/AIDS. A core set of interventions
can be effective in reducing the spread of HIV/AIDS. These
include: 1. Promoting behavior change at both individual and
community/social level through communication programs, peer
education, and voluntary counselling and testing. •Tailor
behaviour change messages to specific audiences such as groups
at high risk, men, women and young people. •Address stigma
associated with HIV/AIDS by involving highly motivated people
with HIV/AIDS as members of vulnerable groups in public
information dissemination and efforts. •Promote HIV/AIDS/STI
programs, services and products. 2. Increasing condom use,
availability and quality through condom promotion and
distribution. •Ensure a guaranteed supply of quality male and
female condoms and a condom dissemination system. •Educate
people how to avoid Sexually Transmitted Infections or STI,
recognize common STI symptoms and seek and distribute condoms
through different approaches (targeted, community-based,
outlet-based). •Popularize and increase acceptability of condoms
through condom promotion and social marketing campaigns.
•Control the quality of condoms through regular sampling and
testing. 3. Establish comprehensive sexually transmitted
infections management programmes. •Diagnosing and treating
sexually transmitted infections. •Develop a national protocol
for sexually transmitted infections case management. •Include
sexually transmitted infections drugs in the essential drug
list. •Make syndromic management of sexually transmitted
infections available at first point of contact in the health
care system. •Link sexually transmitted infections services to
counseling and other HIV/AIDS services. 4. Establish voluntary
counseling and testing service. •Establish and/or strengthen a
highly accessible voluntary counseling and testing system which
offers anonymous testing, pre-testing and post-test counseling
to anyone who needs it. •Publicize the existence of voluntary
counseling and testing service. •Ensure the affordability of
voluntary counseling and testing service, especially for
high-risk and vulnerable groups. •Link voluntary counseling and
testing to other HIV/AIDS and sexually transmitted infectious
services. 5. Ensuring a safe blood supply. •Exclude paid donors
and high-risk donors. Utilize voluntary donors from low-risk
populations for blood supply. •Screen all blood for HIV/AIDS
antibody and other blood-borne infectious agents. •Avoid
unnecessary blood transfusions. 6. Preventing mother-to-child
transmission. •Develop and implement short courses of
antiretroviral drugs and providing infant feeding options.
•Provide voluntary counseling and testing services to antenatal
attendees. •Provide HIV-positive pregnant women with short
courses of zidovudine or nevirapine where possible. •Improve
family planning services and incorporate HIV prevention
activities. 7. Supporting harm reduction among injecting drug
users, which includes providing clean injecting equipment,
counseling, and drug abuse treatment. •Improve access to sterile
injecting equipment and condoms •Promote safe injecting
practices as well as safe sex behaviour. •Offer counseling and
drug abuse treatment. 8. Provide treatment of opportunistic
infections and palliative care. •Develop a HIV/AIDS treatment
and care strategy including Highly Active Anti-retroviral
Therapy or HAART. HAART reduces and prevents many opportunistic
infections associated with HIV/AIDS and may serve to prolong
life. Because of high cost, treatment complexity and the lack of
infrastructure to administer and monitor the therapy, HAART is
currently not widely available outside high-income developed
countries. HAART distribution and scope of treatment can be
increased by adopting the following: •Reducing the cost of drugs
for HAART to make them more affordable and feasible for low- and
middle-income countries. Some evidence of this has already been
implemented and US$ 500 - 1,000 per patient per year in some
developing countries. Although this is a fraction of what it
costs in developed countries, many low-income countries are
still unable to afford this price. •Develop and implement
clinical guidelines for management of common opportunistic
infections including Tuberculosis. •Ensure an adequate supply of
drugs for opportunistic infections, treatment and palliative
care. •Strengthen the capacity of the health system to provide
treatment and care to HIV-positive patients (e.g., ensure
adequacy of diagnostic and treatment facilities for common
opportunistic infections, train medical personnel in treatment
and care for HIV-related conditions). 9. Provide community-based
and home-based care to complement traditional hospital care.
•Provide funding and training for communities to provide care
for and support people living with HIV/AIDS. 10. Strengthen the
safety net for poor households affected by AIDS, including AIDS
orphans. •Provide assistance to poor households affected by AIDS
and to AIDS orphans. 11. Provide counseling and prevention
services for people living with HIV/AIDS and their families. 12.
Adopt targeted prevention to reduce the transmission of HIV/AIDS
among groups at high risk. This targeted prevention approach
involves the use of well-trained peers who disseminate
information concerning safer sex and conducts referrals to other
HIV/AIDS services. This approach has proven to be successful in
many different settings. It is therefore recommended that
interventions and resources should be directed more strongly to
groups at high risk. Targeted prevention is more effective when
combined with programmes to change social norms and reduce
stigma. 13. Prompt action. Every country is susceptible to the
risk of HIV/AIDS. Leaders and Governments should act promptly
and intervene as soon as possible because the more widely
HIV/AIDS spreads, the more difficult and costly prevention, care
and treatment become. 14. Increase government commitment,
attention, and funding. This is key to success in every country
that has made headway against the epidemic. Leaders need to
overcome taboos and stigma, speak openly about the disease, and
place a multi-sectoral HIV/AIDS program high in their
development agendas. To ensure adequate funding for HIV/AIDS, it
is necessary for governments to re-examine spending priorities,
reallocate accordingly and mobilize donor support. 15. Create
and enabling policy environment. An enabling environment with
regard to local, social, and gender policies is essential for
the success of a national HIV/AIDS program, as it facilitates
the participation of key stakeholders and helps reduce
risk-taking behaviors, stigma and discrimination. 16. Prevent
infection among those most likely to contract and spread HIV.
Effective, low-cost prevention interventions for such groups at
high risk already exist. However, such groups are often the most
marginalized and stigmatized and thus unable to compete for
attention and resources themselves. To identify groups at high
risk, their social networks and then target them with sustained,
effective prevention interventions should be the priority of a
national HIV/AIDS program. 17. Prioritize interventions by their
proven effectiveness. Prioritizing interventions based on their
effectiveness can maximize the number of new HIV infections
averted in the presence of resource and capacity constraints.
Budget allocation among different components of a national
HIV/AIDS program should reflect a strategic choice of effective
interventions. 18. Use a multi-sectoral approach with active
involvement of all relevant sectors, civil society and private
entities. This would generate greater commitment, mobilize
additional resources and improve the sustainability of
interventions and their chance for success. Different sectors
such as education, transport, defense, tourism, etc., can play a
role in the fight against HIV/AIDS. Local communities are often
capable of understanding local cultural and social contexts,
mobilizing people, and reaching out to marginalized high-risk
groups. 19. Integrate HIV/AIDS in poverty reduction strategies.
It is still not clear whether poverty increases the likelihood
of HIV infection. However, there is strong evidence that
HIV/AIDS causes and worsens poverty. The integration of HIV/AIDS
into national antipoverty programmes would help ensure the
priority of HIV/AIDS control in the development agenda and
facilitate actions to mitigate the impact of AIDS on the poor.
20. Develop a good monitoring and evaluation and surveillance
system. A realistic monitoring and evaluation plan with
clearly-defined input, output, outcome and impact indicators
helps track the performance of the national AIDS response and
evaluate its impact on the epidemic. A Second Generation
Surveillance System recommended by World Health Organization and
United Nation AIDS Program, monitors trends in the epidemic and
in contributing risk behaviors.
“Prevention is better than cure” and should be stressed in all
AIDS programs. Prevention averts suffering and death and
reduces, prevents and eliminates burden to health care systems.
The cost of averting an HIV infection through cost-effective
interventions can be a fraction of the cost of treatment and
care for an AIDS patient.
References Adeyi O et al. AIDS, Poverty Reduction and Debt
Relief: A Toolkit for Mainstreaming HIV/AIDS Programmes into
Development Instruments, UNAIDS and World Bank, Geneva, 2000.
http://www.worldbank.org/aids-econ/confront/ovrview.htm#Summary.
http://www.unaids.org/bestpractice/collection/subject/specific/in
dex.html. http://www.nap.edu/books/0309071372/html. National
AIDS Programmes: A Guide to Monitoring and Evaluation. UNAIDS.
Geneva, 2000. UNAIDS, 2002, AIDS Epidemic Update. UNAIDS, 2002,
Report on the Global HIV/AIDS Epidemic. World Bank, 1997,
Confronting AIDS: Public Priorities in a Global Epidemic World
Bank, 1999, Intensifying Action Against HIV/AIDS in Africa:
Responding to a Development Crisis. World Bank, 2000, Costs of
Scaling HIV Program Activities to a National Level in
Sub-Saharan Africa: Methods and Estimate.
About Author :
Dr Pattron is a Public Health Scientist in the Ministry of
Health, Trinidad.
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