| South Africa’s HIV treatment models ‘not good enough’ |
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Cape Town - More than 400 000 HIV-positive South Africans have begun antiretroviral treatment (ART) since the government launched its programme in 2004. But this impressive-sounding figure only represents one third of the estimated number of people in need of treatment - and that number is expanding by an additional half-a-million people every year. If South Africa is to achieve its ambitious goals for expanding treatment access, as well as the UN Millennium Development Goal of universal access, the current models for delivering treatment will need an overhaul.This was the finding of a study that compared antiretroviral (ARV) service delivery in three South African provinces: Western Cape, Gauteng and Free State. Helen Schneider, a researcher with the Centre for Health Policy at the University of the Witwatersrand, presented the study at the fourth Public Health Association of South Africa Conference in Cape Town on Tuesday, 3 June. She noted that despite the existence of national policies and guidelines for ARV treatment, "implementation is strongly driven by what happens at provincial and district level". A comparison of 16 facilities providing treatment in the three provinces revealed wide variations in referral systems and staffing levels, but in all three provinces the researchers found a lack of integration of ARV services with other health services. Patients frequently had to go to other facilities for the treatment of TB, or for other opportunistic infections, or for antenatal care. The study also found that in many districts there were too few doctors and pharmacists providing ARV services, creating service bottlenecks. Systems for monitoring and evaluating patients on ARV treatment were also generally weak, and the use of data to improve services even weaker. "These models won't be sufficient to achieve universal access," Schneider said. She recommended a shift towards more integrated ARV services, delivered primarily by nurses at primary healthcare clinics. Quality treatment
The challenge was not only to expand the numbers of people receiving treatment, but to safeguard the quality of treatment, said Dr David Pienaar of the University of Cape Town's School of Public Health and Family Medicine. Related stories
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