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HIV treatment and care in resource-constrained environments: challenges for the next decade

Many successes have been achieved in HIV care in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC): increased number of HIV-infected individuals receiving antiretroviral treatment (ART), wide decentralization, reduction in morbidity and mortality and accessibility to cheapest drugs. However, these successes s...

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Autores principales: Eholié, Serge-Paul, Aoussi, François Eba, Ouattara, Ismael Songda, Bissagnéné, Emmanuel, Anglaret, Xavier
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International AIDS Society 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3494167/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22944479
http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.15.2.17334
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author Eholié, Serge-Paul
Aoussi, François Eba
Ouattara, Ismael Songda
Bissagnéné, Emmanuel
Anglaret, Xavier
author_facet Eholié, Serge-Paul
Aoussi, François Eba
Ouattara, Ismael Songda
Bissagnéné, Emmanuel
Anglaret, Xavier
author_sort Eholié, Serge-Paul
collection PubMed
description Many successes have been achieved in HIV care in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC): increased number of HIV-infected individuals receiving antiretroviral treatment (ART), wide decentralization, reduction in morbidity and mortality and accessibility to cheapest drugs. However, these successes should not hide existing failures and difficulties. In this paper, we underline several key challenges. First, ensure long-term financing, increase available resources, in order to meet the increasing needs, and redistribute the overall budget in a concerted way amongst donors. Second, increase ART coverage and treat the many eligible patients who have not yet started ART. Competition amongst countries is expected to become a strong driving force in encouraging the least efficient to join better performing countries. Third, decrease early mortality on ART, by improving access to prevention, case-finding and treatment of tuberculosis and invasive bacterial diseases and by getting people to start ART much earlier. Fourth, move on from WHO 2006 to WHO 2010 guidelines. Raising the cut-off point for starting ART to 350 CD4/mm(3) needs changing paradigm, adopting opt-out approach, facilitating pro-active testing, facilitating task shifting and increasing staff recruitments. Phasing out stavudine needs acting for a drastic reduction in the costs of other drugs. Scaling up routine viral load needs a mobilization for lower prices of reagents and equipments, as well as efforts in relation to point-of-care automation and to maintenance. The latter is a key step to boost the utilization of second-line regimens, which are currently dramatically under prescribed. Finally, other challenges are to reduce lost-to-follow-up rates; manage lifelong treatment and care for long-term morbidity, including drug toxicity, residual AIDS and HIV-non-AIDS morbidity and aging-related morbidity; and be able to face unforeseen events such as socio-political and military crisis. An old African proverb states that the growth of a deep-rooted tree cannot be stopped. Our tree is well rooted in existing field experience and is, therefore, expected to grow. In order for us to let it grow, long-term cost-effectiveness approach and life-saving evidence-based programming should replace short-term budgeting approach.
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spelling pubmed-34941672012-11-26 HIV treatment and care in resource-constrained environments: challenges for the next decade Eholié, Serge-Paul Aoussi, François Eba Ouattara, Ismael Songda Bissagnéné, Emmanuel Anglaret, Xavier J Int AIDS Soc Commentary Many successes have been achieved in HIV care in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC): increased number of HIV-infected individuals receiving antiretroviral treatment (ART), wide decentralization, reduction in morbidity and mortality and accessibility to cheapest drugs. However, these successes should not hide existing failures and difficulties. In this paper, we underline several key challenges. First, ensure long-term financing, increase available resources, in order to meet the increasing needs, and redistribute the overall budget in a concerted way amongst donors. Second, increase ART coverage and treat the many eligible patients who have not yet started ART. Competition amongst countries is expected to become a strong driving force in encouraging the least efficient to join better performing countries. Third, decrease early mortality on ART, by improving access to prevention, case-finding and treatment of tuberculosis and invasive bacterial diseases and by getting people to start ART much earlier. Fourth, move on from WHO 2006 to WHO 2010 guidelines. Raising the cut-off point for starting ART to 350 CD4/mm(3) needs changing paradigm, adopting opt-out approach, facilitating pro-active testing, facilitating task shifting and increasing staff recruitments. Phasing out stavudine needs acting for a drastic reduction in the costs of other drugs. Scaling up routine viral load needs a mobilization for lower prices of reagents and equipments, as well as efforts in relation to point-of-care automation and to maintenance. The latter is a key step to boost the utilization of second-line regimens, which are currently dramatically under prescribed. Finally, other challenges are to reduce lost-to-follow-up rates; manage lifelong treatment and care for long-term morbidity, including drug toxicity, residual AIDS and HIV-non-AIDS morbidity and aging-related morbidity; and be able to face unforeseen events such as socio-political and military crisis. An old African proverb states that the growth of a deep-rooted tree cannot be stopped. Our tree is well rooted in existing field experience and is, therefore, expected to grow. In order for us to let it grow, long-term cost-effectiveness approach and life-saving evidence-based programming should replace short-term budgeting approach. International AIDS Society 2012-08-22 /pmc/articles/PMC3494167/ /pubmed/22944479 http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.15.2.17334 Text en © 2012 Serge-Paul Eholié et al; licensee International AIDS Society http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 Unported License, permitting all non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Commentary
Eholié, Serge-Paul
Aoussi, François Eba
Ouattara, Ismael Songda
Bissagnéné, Emmanuel
Anglaret, Xavier
HIV treatment and care in resource-constrained environments: challenges for the next decade
title HIV treatment and care in resource-constrained environments: challenges for the next decade
title_full HIV treatment and care in resource-constrained environments: challenges for the next decade
title_fullStr HIV treatment and care in resource-constrained environments: challenges for the next decade
title_full_unstemmed HIV treatment and care in resource-constrained environments: challenges for the next decade
title_short HIV treatment and care in resource-constrained environments: challenges for the next decade
title_sort hiv treatment and care in resource-constrained environments: challenges for the next decade
topic Commentary
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3494167/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22944479
http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.15.2.17334
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