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[pronut-hiv] An African answer to fighting AIDS
- From: "ProNut-HIV" <pronut-hiv@healthnet.org>
- Date: Mon, 29 May 2006 08:07:49 -0400
MANTO TSHABALALA-MSIMANG
An African answer to fighting AIDS
By Manto Tshabalala-Msimang | May 26, 2006
GLOBAL LEADERS will converge for a special session of the UN General
Assembly next week to review progress and seek agreement on the best
path toward universal access to treatment and prevention of HIV and
AIDS.
The session focuses on an exceptional challenge. However, it is also
part of a complex, interlocking set of problems demanding our attention.
Due to the limited resources available to combat HIV and AIDS, the more
inclusive that we make the priorities that we set, the better.
In the runup to the special session, African officials have consulted
widely to strengthen our consensus on the best way forward.
We agreed that there has to be a renewed focus on prevention as the
mainstay of our response to the spread of HIV infection and the impact
of AIDS. We also agreed that our common purpose would be better served
if the international donor community were to align itself more closely
with the plans that Africans are establishing for themselves.
In South Africa, we launched the Comprehensive Plan for Management,
Care, and Treatment of HIV and AIDS two years ago, and it is almost
entirely funded by the national budget. The plan has three pillars.
First, we try to ensure that the majority of South Africans who are
HIV-free remain that way, by making the country hostile terrain to the
virus. Our interventions include campaigns to promote safe and healthy
sexual behavior and to remove the stigma attached to AIDS. We offer
counseling and testing, free distribution of male and female condoms on
a massive scale, and programs to prevent mother-to-child transmission of
HIV. There also are broader governmental interventions to combat poverty
and malnutrition, to improve the socio-economic status of women, and to
deal with the challenges of violence.
Also, we have to help those who are infected to stay as healthy as
possible. This means improving the nutrition of those affected,
redoubling our efforts against tuberculosis, and ensuring that everyone
has access to prophylaxis and treatment for other opportunistic
infections. Good nutrition cannot rid a person of HIV, but it can
improve the immune system and be an important factor in staving off
illness.
When faced with ill health, many of our people turn to African
traditional medicines, which sustained them through generations of
colonialism and apartheid. In response, we are investing in research and
development of these medicines to treat various ailments, and we are
establishing the efficacy of such medicines in alleviating conditions
associated with AIDS.
Lastly, once an HIV-positive person has a high CD4 cell count or
exhibits stage 4 AIDS-defining illness as defined by the World Health
Organization, the patient is eligible for antiretroviral treatment at
government expense. The Health Systems Trust, an independent group that
monitors healthcare delivery in South Africa, recently reported that our
progress in delivering antiretroviral treatment ``has probably been
swifter than in any comparable country."
Building the infrastructure to deliver treatment safely and effectively
on a large scale is no easy task in the public health environment that
we inherited from apartheid. Caregivers have to be recruited and
trained, clinics accredited, and testing, monitoring and reporting
systems put in place. There have to be reliable supplies of affordable
drugs that meet our regulatory standards.
Above all, the program has to be built up in a manner that strengthens
the overall public health system to deal with the broader burden of
disease facing us, ranging from infections to trauma and chronic
ailments such as diabetes and cardiovascular diseases.
The Washington-based Hudson Institute has said our plan is ``the only
one that has taken into consideration such important issues as the
future recurrent cost obligations that will be required to sustain it,
independent of external financial support," and ``is based on the
uncompromising dictates of science and medicine."
It is critically important to recognize that antiretroviral treatment is
but one of the components in our response to the scourge of HIV and
AIDS. Despite the fact that our program cannot be compared with some
others in terms of its scale and comprehensiveness, we believe that the
number of patients receiving antiretroviral treatment cannot be the only
measure of our success or failure.
If we let that happen, we risk shortchanging the other efforts --
especially on the prevention front -- that we are making to ensure the
health of our people.
Dr. Manto Tshabalala-Msimang is minister of health of South Africa.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2006/05/26/an_african_answer_to_fighting_aids/
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