Programs to Prevent HIV in Newborns Failing in the Developing World - Over 900 Avoidable HIV Infections Every Day
Posted on: Thursday, 21 May 2009, 08:30 CDT
New multi-country research study finds neither newborns nor their mothers are receiving appropriate treatment and care to end this needless tragedy
Although the drugs have been available for over a decade, two-thirds of HIV-positive pregnant women in the developing world do not receive any antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) to prevent HIV transmission to infants. Worse, most of those who get drugs are treated with a therapy known to be just over 40% effective, rather than the triple-dose combination therapy that successfully prevents almost 98% of newborn HIV infections in the developed world.
"The statistics clearly show that governments of developing countries are failing to provide effective drug therapy to prevent HIV infections in newborns. Worse still, our research findings point to an unacceptable absence of a comprehensive program to prevent vertical transmission," said Aditi Sharma, coordinator of the Treatment Monitoring and Advocacy Project of ITPC. "Unless governments begin to address the fundamental barriers specific to women that stop them accessing health care services, the world will continue to miss the target of eradicating vertical transmission of HIV."
Research conducted by civil society activists in
"On paper, the existing global program is a model of sound design, human rights principles and a comprehensive approach. In practice, it is a shameful demonstration of double standards and another instance of women's programming for which everyone and no one at the UN is in charge," said
Findings from each country demonstrate the many symptoms of the failure:
- In
Cambodia , 88 percent of HIV-positive mothers receive no ARV prophylaxis at all; - Shortages of ARVs and health workers plus poor infrastructure make women's access to health services particularly difficult for
Uganda's rural and post-conflict areas; - Over 30 percent of pregnant women in
Argentina get no HIV test prior to going into labor; - In
Moldova knowledge about prevention of vertical transmission and awareness of the risks of mixed infant feeding is very poor; - In
Morocco , almost a third of women have no access to any prenatal exam and a third of births are not assisted by health care professionals; Zimbabwe's situation provides stark evidence of the importance of a comprehensive approach to women's health. "The program to prevent vertical transmission has been severely compromised since early 2008 because of the collapse of the health delivery system," explains Caroline Mubaira, of theZimbabwe research team. "Before the economic and political turmoil, the prevention of vertical transmission program was among the best in the southern African region. When it was operating well, structures were in place and they were supported by policy. Staff were trained and the Minister of Health provided constant feedback and gathered data about the status of the program at each stage of the comprehensive care provision";- In every country, the researchers found rampant fear of stigma among women and discrimination by health care workers. Governments are failing to address the health needs of women and there is inadequate integration between vertical transmission and maternal and child health, HIV treatment and sexual and reproductive health services;
- The report also warns of a "significant and dangerous inconsistency" in infant feeding guidance given to HIV-positive mothers.
"The ITPC report adds to the growing evidence of the vital need to tackle gender inequities in order to provide universal access to health care," says
In its recommendations, ITPC calls on UN agencies to radically improve coordination at all levels, and for governments, donors and UN agencies to publish a joint action plan to provide comprehensive vertical transmission services to those in need.
"UN agencies were instrumental in helping set the vital goal of universal access to HIV prevention, treatment and care," said
Specific report recommendations include:
- At UNGASS in
June 2010 , UNAIDS, WHO and UNICEF should report progress based on all four prongs of the comprehensive strategy -- not just the provision of prophylaxis. - Governments, with support from donors, should increase mothers' access to the triple-dose ARV regimen, currently provided to only eight percent of those treated to prevent transmission to newborns.
- WHO and UNICEF need to urgently work with governments to revise national infant-feeding policies consistent with global guidelines and latest research, and regularly assess implementation.
The report, published by the Treatment Monitoring and Advocacy Project (TMAP) of ITPC, is based on research conducted in the six countries between
SOURCE International Treatment Preparedness Coalition
Source: PR Newswire
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