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Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p”

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Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p”. B. Ryan Phelps Office of HIV/AIDS, USAID. New HIV infections in children. Source: Universal Access Report, 2011. Objectives. Two literature reviews Retention along the PMTCT continuum of care Community-based strategies that work. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p” B. Ryan Phelps Office of HIV/AIDS, USAID
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Page 1: Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p”

Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p”

B. Ryan PhelpsOffice of HIV/AIDS, USAID

Page 2: Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p”

New HIV infections in children

Source: Universal Access Report, 2011

Indicators 2009 2010 2015 Target

Number of new pediatric HIV infections 430,000 390,000 <43,000

Page 3: Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p”

• Two literature reviews– Retention along the PMTCT continuum of care– Community-based strategies that work

Objectives

Page 4: Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p”

PMTCT care continuum

Page 5: Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p”

The PMTCT Effectiveness in Africa: Research and Linkages to Care (PEARL) Studyhttp://www.pepfar.gov/documents/organization/118151.pdf

SdNVP coverage in pregnancy

Page 6: Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p”

More PMTCT Options

Status of B+ Decision CountriesMOH-endorsed plan for national implementation of B+

MalawiRwandaHaiti

MOH-endorsed plan for phased implementation of B+

UgandaKenya

National Steering Group recommendation to move to B+; not yet MoH-endorsed

NamibiaSouth Africa

Piloting B+ Mozambique (large pilot – 241 sites)Cameroon (small pilot)Swaziland

Considering transition to B+ Tanzania South Africa

Page 7: Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p”

HAART coverage in pregnancy

L. Ferguson et al. Linking HIV-positive pregnant women to treatment services Trop Med and Intl Health; v17 no 5 pp 564–580, May 2012

Killam et al, Zambia, 2010

Mandala et al, Zambia, 2010

Page 8: Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p”

PMTCT care continuum

Page 9: Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p”

All pregnant mothers at first ANC

Pregnant mothers accepting testing

Pregnant mothers testing positive (25%) Delivery 6 months

postpartum36 week ANC

Ahoua, Ayikoru et al. 2010

Cook, Ciampa et al. 2011

Manzi, Zachariah et al. 2005

Retention of HIV-exposed infants (1)

Page 10: Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p”

Eligible HIV-exposed infants

2 months after enrolment

18 months of ageEnrolled HIV-

exposed infants

Eligible HIV-exposed infants

Return for at least one visit

4 month visit

Hassan, Sakwa et al. 2011

Sherman, Jones et al. 2004

Ioannidis, Taha et al. 1999

Retention of HIV-exposed infants (2)

Page 11: Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p”

(Unpublished CHAI data , 2009)

Retention of HIV-exposed infants (3)

Page 12: Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p”

PMTCT care continuum

Page 13: Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p”

• Two literature reviews– Retention along the PMTCT continuum of care– Community-based strategies that work

Objectives

Page 14: Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p”
Page 15: Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p”

1st Author Country Intervention OutcomeFutterman. South Africa Mentor mother-guided

education and supportHIV knowledge increased

Orne-Gliemann

Zimbabwe Community sensitization with peer educators

Increased HIV awareness; increased PMTCT knowledge; increased condom use (reported)

Balogun Nigeria N/A TBA counseling of HIV exposed clients and referral for testing depended on knowledge level

Teasdale South Africa M2M program Increased NVP coverage (mothers and infants)

Torpey Zambia Lay counselors and traditional and religious leader engagement

More pregnant women tested and receiving results; seropositive pregnant women receivingcomplete course of ARV prophylaxis

Faraquhar Kenya Partner engagement Women whose partners came for testing ~ 3x more likely to return and report taking NVP

Chandisarewa Zimbabwe Community counselor-driven opt-out testing

More women tested, received results; more diagnosis in ANC, and more NVP uptake

Bekker South Africa Community counselor providing PSS/support

More women started ART

Kurewa Zimbabwe Support groups, and community tracking

Less LTFU among mother-infant pairs

Page 16: Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p”
Page 17: Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p”

PEPFAR-supported Acceleration PlansTUNISIA

MOROCCO

SAHARA

ALGERIA

MAURITANIAMALI NIGE

R

LIBYA

CHAD

Mediterranean Sea

Sea

EGYPT

SUDAN

ETHIOPIA

DJIBOUTI

ERITREA

SOMALIAKENYA

TANZANIA

DEMOCRATIC

CENTRAL

RWANDA

GABON

EQUATORIAL

ANGOLA

CONGO

NIGERIA

BENIN

DTVOIRE

SIERRA

SENEGAL

GHANA

THE

GUINEA

LIBERIA

CAMEROON

SOUTH AFRICA

MALAWI

ZAMBIA

MOZAMBIQUE MADAGASCARZIMBABWE

BOTSWANA

SWAZILAND

Indian

Ocean

LESOTHO

NAMIBIA

ANGOLA

Atlantic

Ocean

WESTERN

Red

UGANDA

OF THE CONGO

REPUBLIC

BURUNDI

GUINEAREP. OF

TOGOCOTE

BURKINAGUINEA

LEONE

GAMBIA

BISSAU

Walvis Bay

SOUTH

REPUBLIC

AFRICAN

THE

AFRICA

Legend 6 Original Acceleration Countries 8 New Acceleration Countries

PEPFAR PMTCT programs in Global Plan countries*

SOUTHSUDAN

* PEPFAR supports programming in India (not pictured)

Acceleration Plans all required to have community engagement elements

Page 18: Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p”

New HIV infections in children

Source: Universal Access Report, 2011

Indicators 2009 2010 2015 Target

Number of new pediatric HIV infections 430,000 390,000 <43,000

Page 19: Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p”
Page 20: Community interventions and PMTCT: the other “p”

Thank you.

Kea leboga.

Niyabonga.


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