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The multi-step process of building TB/HIV collaboration in Cambodia

Tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS have synergistic health impacts in terms of disease development and progression. Therefore, collaborative TB and HIV/AIDS activities are a logical health systems response. However, the establishment of these activities presents a challenge for countries that have strong ver...

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Autores principales: Eang, Mao Tan, Vun, Mean Chhi, Eam, Khun Kim, Sovannarith, Samreth, Sopheap, Seng, Bora, Ngauv, Yadav, Rajendra, Fujita, Masami, Tomas, Bernard, Ghidinelli, Massimo, van Maaren, Pieter, Wells, William A
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3522048/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23078621
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1478-4505-10-34
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author Eang, Mao Tan
Vun, Mean Chhi
Eam, Khun Kim
Sovannarith, Samreth
Sopheap, Seng
Bora, Ngauv
Yadav, Rajendra
Fujita, Masami
Tomas, Bernard
Ghidinelli, Massimo
van Maaren, Pieter
Wells, William A
author_facet Eang, Mao Tan
Vun, Mean Chhi
Eam, Khun Kim
Sovannarith, Samreth
Sopheap, Seng
Bora, Ngauv
Yadav, Rajendra
Fujita, Masami
Tomas, Bernard
Ghidinelli, Massimo
van Maaren, Pieter
Wells, William A
author_sort Eang, Mao Tan
collection PubMed
description Tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS have synergistic health impacts in terms of disease development and progression. Therefore, collaborative TB and HIV/AIDS activities are a logical health systems response. However, the establishment of these activities presents a challenge for countries that have strong vertical disease programs that differ in their implementation philosophies. Here, we review the process by which TB/HIV collaboration was established in Cambodia. A cycle of overlapping and mutually reinforcing initiatives – local research; piloted implementation with multiple options; and several rounds of policy formulation guided by a cross-functional Technical Working Group – was used to drive nationwide introduction of a full set of TB/HIV collaborative activities. Senior Ministry of Health officials and partner organizations brought early attention to TB/HIV. Both national programs implemented initial screening and testing interventions, even in the absence of a detailed, overarching framework. The use of multiple options for HIV testing identified which programmatic options worked best, and early implementation and pilots determined what unanswered questions required further research. Local conduct of this research – on co-treatment timing and TB symptom screening – speeded adoption of the results into policy guidance, and clarified the relative roles of the two programs. Roll-out is continuing, and results for a variety of key indicators, including screening PLHIV for TB, and testing TB patients for HIV, are at 70-80% and climbing. This experience in Cambodia illustrates the influence of health research on policy, and demonstrates that clear policy guidance, the pursuit of incremental advances, and the use of different approaches to generate evidence can overcome structural barriers to change and bring direct benefits to patients.
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spelling pubmed-35220482012-12-14 The multi-step process of building TB/HIV collaboration in Cambodia Eang, Mao Tan Vun, Mean Chhi Eam, Khun Kim Sovannarith, Samreth Sopheap, Seng Bora, Ngauv Yadav, Rajendra Fujita, Masami Tomas, Bernard Ghidinelli, Massimo van Maaren, Pieter Wells, William A Health Res Policy Syst Commentary Tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS have synergistic health impacts in terms of disease development and progression. Therefore, collaborative TB and HIV/AIDS activities are a logical health systems response. However, the establishment of these activities presents a challenge for countries that have strong vertical disease programs that differ in their implementation philosophies. Here, we review the process by which TB/HIV collaboration was established in Cambodia. A cycle of overlapping and mutually reinforcing initiatives – local research; piloted implementation with multiple options; and several rounds of policy formulation guided by a cross-functional Technical Working Group – was used to drive nationwide introduction of a full set of TB/HIV collaborative activities. Senior Ministry of Health officials and partner organizations brought early attention to TB/HIV. Both national programs implemented initial screening and testing interventions, even in the absence of a detailed, overarching framework. The use of multiple options for HIV testing identified which programmatic options worked best, and early implementation and pilots determined what unanswered questions required further research. Local conduct of this research – on co-treatment timing and TB symptom screening – speeded adoption of the results into policy guidance, and clarified the relative roles of the two programs. Roll-out is continuing, and results for a variety of key indicators, including screening PLHIV for TB, and testing TB patients for HIV, are at 70-80% and climbing. This experience in Cambodia illustrates the influence of health research on policy, and demonstrates that clear policy guidance, the pursuit of incremental advances, and the use of different approaches to generate evidence can overcome structural barriers to change and bring direct benefits to patients. BioMed Central 2012-10-18 /pmc/articles/PMC3522048/ /pubmed/23078621 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1478-4505-10-34 Text en Copyright ©2012 Eang et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Commentary
Eang, Mao Tan
Vun, Mean Chhi
Eam, Khun Kim
Sovannarith, Samreth
Sopheap, Seng
Bora, Ngauv
Yadav, Rajendra
Fujita, Masami
Tomas, Bernard
Ghidinelli, Massimo
van Maaren, Pieter
Wells, William A
The multi-step process of building TB/HIV collaboration in Cambodia
title The multi-step process of building TB/HIV collaboration in Cambodia
title_full The multi-step process of building TB/HIV collaboration in Cambodia
title_fullStr The multi-step process of building TB/HIV collaboration in Cambodia
title_full_unstemmed The multi-step process of building TB/HIV collaboration in Cambodia
title_short The multi-step process of building TB/HIV collaboration in Cambodia
title_sort multi-step process of building tb/hiv collaboration in cambodia
topic Commentary
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3522048/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23078621
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1478-4505-10-34
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