Pre Exposure Prophylaxis: an effective way to prevent new HIV infections – Omolara Bamiwola 

Pre Exposure Prophylaxis: an effective way to prevent new HIV infections – Omolara Bamiwola 

Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is the use of antiretroviral as a prevention method in men and women. It is used by HIV negative persons who are at substantial risk of HIV infection. It is very effective in preventing anal and vaginal transmission of HIV infection.

There is a need for effective and adequate advocacy for PrEP in the community as more people need to be aware of it. Health workers and people that work with and have direct contact with the community also need to have this information order to provide adequate referrals to persons that are in need of this prevention method. Adolescent and young people who are at risk of the HIV infection also needs this awareness and should be able to walk into health facilities to demand this service.

Increased knowledge about PrEP would significantly reduce the incidence of HIV infection, hence PrEP should be readily available and accessible.

Omolara Bamiwola 

2019 LeNNiB Champion 

VISION 2020: TREATMENT AND ADHERENCE IS KEY (2) – AKINDIYA TITILAYO

VISION 2020: TREATMENT AND ADHERENCE IS KEY (2) – AKINDIYA TITILAYO

 

The Test and Start treatment model is the current procedure adopted for treating PLHIV. Once a person is treated positive, treatment starts immediately. There are three categories of drugs used in treatment depending on the viral strain.

The first line drugs are readily available in treatment centers. If a patient is on this drug and takes it regularly, they are very active in killing the viral cells and hinder multiplication to facilitate viral suppression after about 6months. Viral suppression is the stage where the viral load in the blood has reduced so greatly that it becomes undetectable in the blood. At this stage, the probability of the person transferring the virus to another person would have reduced greatly, this makes it less risky for others to contact the virus from such person.

The second line drugs are more expensive and not as available as the first line drugs.They are used when people develop resistance to the first line drug. The first line drugs would not be able to suppress the virus in such people, hence the need for the second line drugs.

In rare situations of resistance, third line drugs are used and at the moment, they are not even available in Nigeria. In lieu of this, PLHIV are enjoined to strictly adhere to their drugs, to avoid building resistance. It is, therefore, critical for family and friends are encouraged and help them through this process in order to attain suppression in good time. Health workers should also be trained and re-trained to get involved in the follow-up of their patients.

by 

Titilayo Akindiya

 2019 LeNNiB Champion

VISION 2020: TREATMENT AND ADHERENCE IS KEY (1) – AKINDIYA TITILAYO

VISION 2020: TREATMENT AND ADHERENCE IS KEY (1) – AKINDIYA TITILAYO

The UNAIDS has a target of 90:90:90 by the year 2020. The aim of this is that by the year 2020, 90% of the world population would know their HIV status, 90% of people living with HIV (PLHIV) would have started treatment, and 90% of PLHIV already on treatment would have attained viral suppression. This is a huge task that can only be accomplished if necessary measures are put in place. One major factor to achieving this is ensuring PLHIV gain access to treatment services and adhere strictly to treatment. The treatment plan includes prevention and management of opportunistic infections like TB, diarrhea, Respiratory tract infections. TB management is a great challenge because many private hospitals do not manage clients.

If the vision 2020 would become a reality, there is a need for more emphasis laid on the referral of PLHIV to the appropriate quarters for proper screening, treatment services and follow up.

By

Akindiya Titilayo

2019 LeNNiB Champion

Leaving no adolescent behind in the HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment response-Akindiya Titilayo

Leaving no adolescent behind in the HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment response-Akindiya Titilayo

Adolescents are defined as people between the age of 10–19, undergoing rapid psychological, sexual and physical maturity. Adolescents are one of the most affected populations by HIV. Globally, over two million adolescents are living with HIV [1 ].

Studies have shown that many adolescents do not know their HIV status, many Parents did not disclose the HIV status of the children to them, adolescents living with HIV have poorer knowledge of HIV prevention and transmission. It was also observed that many adolescents are lost to follow up during transitioning from pediatric to the adult clinic at age 15 [2]. During this period, adolescents living with HIV are at high risk of poor adherence to ART, disengagement from HIV care, immunological deterioration and death [3].

In order to improve the statistics of adolescents attaining viral suppression and reduce HIV prevalence, proper measures should be put in place and they include;

  • Increased HCT uptake: the first step to accessing other treatment and support services is knowing your HIV status. Every adolescent should be encouraged to know their HIV status [2].
  • Parents and guardians should be empowered for prompt HIV disclosure to their children and wards, in order to promote treatment adherence [2].
  • Standardized adolescent-friendly health services should be created and health care providers should be trained and retrained to provide these services [2].

Adolescents living with HIV should be trained and engaged as peer mentors and treatment adherence counselors for their peers transiting from pediatric to adult care [2]. A comprehensive sexuality education program that addresses the specific needs of adolescents living with HIV should also be provided.

Provision of psycho-social support and other structures that promote team bonding, experience sharing and livelihood is critical. The mental health and psychological effects of having to live with HIV should be addressed, beyond giving them drugs, their mental health should be properly taken care of. Economic empowerment should also be looked into, they should be encouraged to make a living [2].

References:

1.Patton GC, Viner RM, le Linh C, Ameratunga S, Fatusi AO, Ferguson BJ, et al. Mapping a global agenda for adolescent health. J Adolesc Health.2010;47(5):427–32.

2. Francis Umoh, Positive Action For Treatment Access(PATA). Adolescents Living with HIV: Needs and Constraints.

3.Sovannary Tuot ,Vohith Khol ,Chanrith Ngin ,Pheak Chhoun and Siyan Yi, et al. AIDS Research and Therapy2018.

WILL NIGERIA FINALLY ELIMINATE USER FEES FOR HIV RELATED SERVICES IN 2019 – Morenike Folayan

WILL NIGERIA FINALLY ELIMINATE USER FEES FOR HIV RELATED SERVICES IN 2019 – Morenike Folayan

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)

Open letter to the Presidency for the Global Fund Replenishment

Open letter to the Presidency for the Global Fund Replenishment

14 February 2019
His Excellency,
President Mohammad Buhari GCFR
President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria
Presidential Villa
Abuja, Nigeria.

Your Excellency,
OPEN LETTER TO HIS EXCELLENCY, PRESIDENT OF THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF NIGERIA CALLING FOR NIGERIA’S COMMITMENT TOWARDS THE GLOBAL FUND’S 6th REPLENISHMENT AND INCREASED DOMESTIC RESOURCES FOR HEALTH
Background
Please recall in 2016 when you pledged $10,000,000 and paid the amount in full to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (Global Fund). We, the undersigned advocates, activists and representatives of communities living with, affected by and vulnerable to the three diseases HIV, Tuberculosis and Malaria in Nigeria, are proud of our country’s contributions since Global Fund’s establishment in 2002 which has saved over 27 million lives and which continue to build sustainable health systems, promote human rights, and advance gender equality.

We have seen how your contributions have catalyzed counterpart donor contributions for health from developed countries. Your government and other countries’ continuous support to the Global Fund sends the clear and strong message that you are committed to providing leadership and care in the fight against the three diseases and improving the lives of those most impacted and vulnerable to them!
The Need to Do More
This year, as the Global Fund embarks on its Sixth Replenishment process to fund the next three-year cycle of implementation for 2020 – 2022. The Global Fund aims to raise at least US $14 billion which will help save 16 million additional lives, cut the mortality rate from HIV, TB and malaria in half, and build stronger health systems by 2023.
Through the replenishment, we will help support the Global Fund’s effort to provide treatment to some of the 37.6 million people now living with HIV, reduce the annual rate of 1.8 million new infections, the annual rate of 10 million new cases of TB, and the annual 216 million cases of malaria. We will also help in reducing the estimated annual deaths from HIV, TB and Malaria as epidemics: HIV is the leading global cause of early death among women ages 15 – 49; causes an estimated 1.8 million deaths annually from TB, 445,000 people – including 285,000 children under the age of five – annually from malaria. This is a pivotal year to get enable us consolidate our gains and be back on track in our fight against these three diseases!
Nigeria is a huge beneficiary from the Global Fund. It is the major funding source for HIV prevention. It has remain for now the major funding source for community related actions for HIV control in Nigeria. The Civil Society therefore calls for the needed Nigeria investment in the Global Fund to support the current national efforts of reaching our jointly set target of elimination of AIDS by 2030. In addition, we will be supporting the country to achieve its commitments to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of 2030 – delivering health and well-being for all, to achieve universal health coverage, and to build a more prosperous, equitable and sustainable world. With only 11 years left, it is time to step up our game!
Raising at least US$14 billion by the Global Fund for its Sixth Replenishment, will signify merely a maintenance of the current programming and not scaled-up responses to the three epidemics. Technical partners have estimated the total funding need for AIDS, TB and malaria at US$46 billion annually of which, as the Get Back on Track to End the Epidemics report by the Global Fund Advocates Network (GFAN) estimates, at least US$16.8 to US$18 billion should be invested through the Global Fund for the Sixth Replenishment (2020-2022). This would reflect a minimum increase of 22% compared to the US$11.9 billion raised from the Fifth Replenishment (2017-2019).
An increased Replenishment will provide the Global Fund the ability to scale up its effective responses and get the world back on track to fight the three diseases! This, coupled with increased domestic investments in health will take Nigeria and the world closer to ending AIDS, TB and malaria and epidemics.
Prayer
Your Excellency, our prayers are that:
We call on the Government of Nigeria to support and champion the 6th replenishment of the Global Fund by speaking up in support of the Global Fund and highlighting the impact of the Global Fund partnership in Nigeria.
We call on Government of Nigeria to lead African countries in announcing an increase of domestic resources for health towards 5% of your GDP over the next 3 years. Such an increase will sustain gains made so far towards universal health coverage and attaining SDG 3 scale up the work already being done. The increased resources will help us get back on track. In addition, increasing resources for health will save the lives of thousands of people of Nigeria. In addition, a healthy nation will be more productive and will grow the economy of Nigeria.
We look forward to your granting of the above prayers.
CC:
The Minister of Health, Federal Ministry of Health (FMoH)
The Minister, Federal Ministry of Finance
The Minister, Federal Ministry of Education
The Minister, Federal Ministry of Women Affairs and Social Development
The Minister, Federal Ministry of Youths and Sports
The Director General, National Agency for the Control of AIDS (NACA)
The Director General, National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA)
The Director General, National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS)
All State Governors
All Local Government Chairpersons
All Embassies in Nigeria
All Partners working with the HIV response in Nigeria
Signatories
Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS in Nigeria (NEPWHAN)
Association of Positive Youths Living with HIV/AIDS in Nigeria (APYIN)
Association of Women Living with HIV in Nigeria (ASHWAN)
African Focus for Youth and Development (AFFFYD)
Association of Civil Society of HIV/AIDS in Nigeria (ASCAN)
Assist Women and Develop Children Initiative
Care for Adolescents and Women Development Initiative (CAWDI)
Care for Development Centre
Centre for Advancement of Liberal Culture and Healthy Living
Centre for Life Enhancement and Community Development
Centre for Peace Education and Community Development
Centre for Research, Advocacy, Women and Youth Development
Centre for the Elderly, Youth and Family Development
Centre for Youth Transformation and Community Development
Citizen Information and Development Initiative
Civil Society for Health and Right of Vulnerable Girls and Women in Nigeria (CiSHRWIN)
Civil Society For HIV and AIDS in Nigeria (CiSHAN)
Civil Society for the Eradication of Tuberculosis in Nigeria (TB Network)
College of Health Sciences, Osun State University
Communities Action for Peace and Better Health Initiative
Community Health Support and Empowerment Initiative (CHSEI)
Community Initiative for sustainable development (CISD)
Couplet Children Foundation
Creative Actors Initiative for Development (CRAID)
Crème de la Crème House of Fame foundation Nigeria
David Tende Orphan Mission Inc.
Dubar Mahila Samanwaya Committee, India
Equal Access for Youth and Women Initiative (EUAYWIN)
Esther Mallo Women Initiative (EMWI)
Febram Health Initiative and Community Development (FEBHICOD)
First Step Action for Children Initiative
Foundation for Community Health, Rights and Development (FOCHRID)
Foundation for social Development and Destitute
Foundation for Sustainable Health Promotion and Development
GAMMUN Centre for Care and Development Nigeria
Global Atlantic Empowerment and Development Initiative
Global Public Health, Nigeria
Good Health Educators Initiative
Health Awareness and Gender Advocacy Initiative (HAGAI)
Healthbridge Survival Initiative
Helpmeet Foundation for Widows and Single Parents
HERWA Community Development Initiative
Hope for Tomorrow Children and Women Initiative
Hope Givers Care and Support Organisation
Idia Renaissance
Indomitable Youths Organisation
Initiative for Grassroot Advancement in Nigeria (INGRA)
Initiative for Peace and Stability (IPAS)
Initiative for Rehabilitation and care for Health and Community (INRECA)
Initiative Youth Development Organisation (IYDO)
International Centre for Advocacy on Right to Health (ICARH)
Josemaria Escriva Foundation
Journalists Against AIDS (JAAIDS)
Kampus Liberty –Uganda
KAP Secretariat
Kebotlhokwa Care Centre, Bostwana
Let them Live Family Health Foundation
Life Repairers International Ministry
Malaria Society of Nigeria
Media Art and Entertainment Network (MAEN)
Mercy Michael Foundation
Mercy Vincent Foundation, Maiduguri
Michael Adedotun Oke Foundation
Mustard Seed Health Awareness Initiative (MSHAI)
New HIV Vaccine and Microbicide Advocacy Society (NHVMAS)
Nigeria AIDS Research Network (NARN)
Nigeria Labour Congress
Nigeria Network of Religious Leaders Living and/or affected by HIV/AIDS
Nigerian Diversity Network (NDN)
Nigerian Women Agro Allied Farmers Association
Nigerian Youth Network on HIV/AIDS (NYNETHA)
Noroware Osula Health Foundation
Organisation for Concerned Souls International
Peer Review Forum (PRF)
PHATBASE Initiative for Human development
Pilgrims Africa Health Foundation
PLAN Health Advocacy and Development Foundation (PLAN Foundation)
Positive Action for Treatment Access (PATA)
PriHEMAC
Public Enlightenment Projects
Renewed Initiative Against Diseases and Poverty (RENAGAIDS)
Safe Environmental Watch and Health Awareness Initiative (SEWHAI)
Shal’dara Health Systems Foundation
Society for Life improvement and Development
Society for the improvement of Rural People (SIRP)
Society for Women and AIDS in Africa (SWAAN)
Society for Women and Children with HIV and AIDS in Nigeria (SOWCHAN)
SOS Children Village
Taimako Health Support Initiative (THSiN)
The Grace Caring Heart Charity Foundation
The Hope Initiative
Total Health Empowerment and Development Initiative (THEDI)
Treatment Access Mobilizers Initiative (TAM) – Nigeria
Ukana West 2 Community Based Health Initiative
Village Community Development Initiative
West Africa Centre for Public Health and Development
Youth for Change Initiative
Youth Network on HIV and AIDS in Nigeria.