WILL NIGERIA FINALLY ELIMINATE USER FEES FOR HIV RELATED SERVICES IN 2019
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Elimination of users fees for HIV related services in Nigeria has been an ongoing campaign by the Civil Society in Nigeria since 2014. It equally became a concern for donors and partners – PEPFAR, CCM and NACA – when its impact on the Nigeria epidemic became apparent from their data: user fees was a barrier to HIV treatment service uptake, retention in care and virological suppression. If Nigeria was to make any further headway to meeting its 2030 goal, the elimination of user fees was definitely critical.

 

At the 2018 CSO Accountability Forum hosted by the Peer Review Forum, a watchdog organization for the HIV response in Nigeria, the call for the elimination of user fees for HIV related services became very loud. Over and over, participants at the conference asked for unconditional elimination of user fees. A protest was held and the call became louder. This call had been made every year at its 2016 and 2017 CSO Accountability Forum. The call this year was audible even to the deaf – the user fee was a significant cause of morbidity and mortality for people living with HIV in Nigeria. It was no longer negotiable. User fees had to be eliminated and the government needs to take this call seriously otherwise it will loose the comradeship it had enjoyed with the civil society.

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 The Peer Review Forum therefore made the campaign for the elimination of user fees for HIV related services one of its four priority advocacy agenda for 2019.

 

PEPFAR equally made this a priority action. The draft COP19 PEPFAR Guidance noted tat as a minimum, for the country to access funds above its maintenance funds, elimination of user fees was not negotiable. “Elimination of all formal and informal user fees in the public sector for access to all direct HIV services and related services, such as ANC and TB services, affecting access to HIV testing and treatment and prevention.“

 

PEPFAR is strategic for the HIV response in Nigeria. It currently provides up to 72% if the HIV response fund in Nigeria. PEPFAR continued funding of the response at this time is critical.

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Fees are charged in many public, private and faith-based health facilities receiving donor support. The ranges of fees charged are below:

        Registration:  N50 – N2,000

        Consultation: N150 – N2,000

        Laboratory services: N200 – N13,000

        Pharmacy/Drugs: N200 – N1,200

        Consumables like syringes- N50 – N100

        ANC services (C-section) – Up to N88,000

 

Prior to the PEPFAR COP19 planning meeting in South Africa that held from the 18th to the 22nd of March, 2019, The Director General of the National Agency for the Control of AIDS called for a meeting of stakeholders to discuss the elimination of user fees. The discussions at this strategic meeting – called the ETG meeting – seems to have crystallized today at the PEPFAR COP19 meeting in South Africa.

Dr Sani Aliyu, the DG of NACA, presented an articulated plan for the elimination of user fees at the just concluded PEPFAR COP19 planning meeting in South Africa. The six-prong approach highlighted should hopefully start the process of eliminating user fees for HIV service access in Nigeria.

The proposed meeting with the Commissioner of Health of the seven priority state later this month to discuss the elimination of user fees is a welcome development. We hope lessons from the seven state will be scaled up and the 36+1 states will be covered by February 2020. The seven priority states are those highlighted in red in the slide below.

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By

Morenike Folayan 

New HIV Vaccine and Microbicide Advocacy Society (NHVMAS)