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Achieving universal access and moving towards elimination of new HIV infections in Cambodia

INTRODUCTION: In the mid-1990s, Cambodia faced one of the fastest growing HIV epidemics in Asia. For its achievement in reversing this trend, and achieving universal access to HIV treatment, the country received a United Nations millennium development goal award in 2010. This article reviews Cambodi...

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Autores principales: Vun, Mean Chhi, Fujita, Masami, Rathavy, Tung, Eang, Mao Tang, Sopheap, Seng, Sovannarith, Samreth, Chhorvann, Chhea, Vanthy, Ly, Sopheap, Oum, Welle, Emily, Ferradini, Laurent, Sedtha, Chin, Bunna, Sok, Verbruggen, Robert
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International AIDS Society 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4065309/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24950749
http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.17.1.18905
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author Vun, Mean Chhi
Fujita, Masami
Rathavy, Tung
Eang, Mao Tang
Sopheap, Seng
Sovannarith, Samreth
Chhorvann, Chhea
Vanthy, Ly
Sopheap, Oum
Welle, Emily
Ferradini, Laurent
Sedtha, Chin
Bunna, Sok
Verbruggen, Robert
author_facet Vun, Mean Chhi
Fujita, Masami
Rathavy, Tung
Eang, Mao Tang
Sopheap, Seng
Sovannarith, Samreth
Chhorvann, Chhea
Vanthy, Ly
Sopheap, Oum
Welle, Emily
Ferradini, Laurent
Sedtha, Chin
Bunna, Sok
Verbruggen, Robert
author_sort Vun, Mean Chhi
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: In the mid-1990s, Cambodia faced one of the fastest growing HIV epidemics in Asia. For its achievement in reversing this trend, and achieving universal access to HIV treatment, the country received a United Nations millennium development goal award in 2010. This article reviews Cambodia’s response to HIV over the past two decades and discusses its current efforts towards elimination of new HIV infections. METHODS: A literature review of published and unpublished documents, including programme data and presentations, was conducted. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: Cambodia classifies its response to one of the most serious HIV epidemics in Asia into three phases. In Phase I (1991–2000), when adult HIV prevalence peaked at 1.7% and incidence exceeded 20,000 cases, a nationwide HIV prevention programme targeted brothel-based sex work. Voluntary confidential counselling and testing and home-based care were introduced, and peer support groups of people living with HIV emerged. Phase II (2001–2011) observed a steady decline in adult prevalence to 0.8% and incidence to 1600 cases by 2011, and was characterized by: expanding antiretroviral treatment (coverage reaching more than 80%) and continuum of care; linking with tuberculosis and maternal and child health services; accelerated prevention among key populations, including entertainment establishment-based sex workers, men having sex with men, transgender persons, and people who inject drugs; engagement of health workers to deliver quality services; and strengthening health service delivery systems. The third phase (2012–2020) aims to attain zero new infections by 2020 through: sharpening responses to key populations at higher risk; maximizing access to community and facility-based testing and retention in prevention and care; and accelerating the transition from vertical approaches to linked/integrated approaches. CONCLUSIONS: Cambodia has tailored its prevention strategy to its own epidemic, established systematic linkages across different services and communities, and achieved nearly universal coverage of HIV services nationwide. Still, the programme must continually (re)prioritize the most effective and efficient interventions, strengthen synergies between programmes, contribute to health system strengthening, and increase domestic funding so that the gains of the previous two decades are sustained, and the goal of zero new infections is reached.
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spelling pubmed-40653092014-06-23 Achieving universal access and moving towards elimination of new HIV infections in Cambodia Vun, Mean Chhi Fujita, Masami Rathavy, Tung Eang, Mao Tang Sopheap, Seng Sovannarith, Samreth Chhorvann, Chhea Vanthy, Ly Sopheap, Oum Welle, Emily Ferradini, Laurent Sedtha, Chin Bunna, Sok Verbruggen, Robert J Int AIDS Soc Review Article INTRODUCTION: In the mid-1990s, Cambodia faced one of the fastest growing HIV epidemics in Asia. For its achievement in reversing this trend, and achieving universal access to HIV treatment, the country received a United Nations millennium development goal award in 2010. This article reviews Cambodia’s response to HIV over the past two decades and discusses its current efforts towards elimination of new HIV infections. METHODS: A literature review of published and unpublished documents, including programme data and presentations, was conducted. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: Cambodia classifies its response to one of the most serious HIV epidemics in Asia into three phases. In Phase I (1991–2000), when adult HIV prevalence peaked at 1.7% and incidence exceeded 20,000 cases, a nationwide HIV prevention programme targeted brothel-based sex work. Voluntary confidential counselling and testing and home-based care were introduced, and peer support groups of people living with HIV emerged. Phase II (2001–2011) observed a steady decline in adult prevalence to 0.8% and incidence to 1600 cases by 2011, and was characterized by: expanding antiretroviral treatment (coverage reaching more than 80%) and continuum of care; linking with tuberculosis and maternal and child health services; accelerated prevention among key populations, including entertainment establishment-based sex workers, men having sex with men, transgender persons, and people who inject drugs; engagement of health workers to deliver quality services; and strengthening health service delivery systems. The third phase (2012–2020) aims to attain zero new infections by 2020 through: sharpening responses to key populations at higher risk; maximizing access to community and facility-based testing and retention in prevention and care; and accelerating the transition from vertical approaches to linked/integrated approaches. CONCLUSIONS: Cambodia has tailored its prevention strategy to its own epidemic, established systematic linkages across different services and communities, and achieved nearly universal coverage of HIV services nationwide. Still, the programme must continually (re)prioritize the most effective and efficient interventions, strengthen synergies between programmes, contribute to health system strengthening, and increase domestic funding so that the gains of the previous two decades are sustained, and the goal of zero new infections is reached. International AIDS Society 2014-06-19 /pmc/articles/PMC4065309/ /pubmed/24950749 http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.17.1.18905 Text en © 2014 Chhi Vun M et al; licensee International AIDS Society http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Review Article
Vun, Mean Chhi
Fujita, Masami
Rathavy, Tung
Eang, Mao Tang
Sopheap, Seng
Sovannarith, Samreth
Chhorvann, Chhea
Vanthy, Ly
Sopheap, Oum
Welle, Emily
Ferradini, Laurent
Sedtha, Chin
Bunna, Sok
Verbruggen, Robert
Achieving universal access and moving towards elimination of new HIV infections in Cambodia
title Achieving universal access and moving towards elimination of new HIV infections in Cambodia
title_full Achieving universal access and moving towards elimination of new HIV infections in Cambodia
title_fullStr Achieving universal access and moving towards elimination of new HIV infections in Cambodia
title_full_unstemmed Achieving universal access and moving towards elimination of new HIV infections in Cambodia
title_short Achieving universal access and moving towards elimination of new HIV infections in Cambodia
title_sort achieving universal access and moving towards elimination of new hiv infections in cambodia
topic Review Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4065309/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24950749
http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.17.1.18905
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