1 / 9

Programming Experiences and Challenges

Programming Experiences and Challenges. Cade Fields-Gardner, MS, RD, LDN, CD TCE Consulting Group. HIV-Specific Programming. Considerations: The usual: general food insecurity, disease HIV uniqueness: medical, social Goals: Medical, social, economic

lowri
Télécharger la présentation

Programming Experiences and Challenges

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Programming Experiences and Challenges Cade Fields-Gardner, MS, RD, LDN, CD TCE Consulting Group

  2. HIV-Specific Programming • Considerations: • The usual: general food insecurity, disease • HIV uniqueness: medical, social • Goals: • Medical, social, economic • Context-dependent: range of target populations, available services, baseline conditions and issues

  3. Nutrition/Food-Related Needs • HIV vs HIV + risk factors • Lessons from infection • Different risk factors and changes in nutrient needs • Increases and decreases (needs and tolerances) • Complications • Unique and common

  4. Examples • Food by Prescription • Incentive to access medical care • Medical nutrition intervention • Food security • HIV-infected as criteria for vulnerability • HIV-affected as criteria for vulnerability

  5. HIV-Specific Examples • Creating categories and training • Malnourished vs adequate by what criteria? • CD4+ - does it count for nutrition? • Previous weight loss, significant decline in BMI • What measures are associated real clinical benefit? • What benefits can be achieved? • Is gaining weight quickly the best thing to do? • Is restoration the same as baseline?

  6. Practice and Evidence? • What lessons can we take from developed countries? • Related to HIV • Transferred from other conditions • Macro- vs micro-modulation: priorities! • What difference are needed in resource-limited settings? • Considering additional criteria: social, economic in a single program • Doing something vs waiting for evidence

  7. Field Experiences • HIV-related distribution in pilot programs and as a part of PVO distribution programs • Isolated soy protein beverage supplemental nutrition for patients in Cape Town, RSA improved consumption of high quality protein • Micronutrient-fortified dehydrated potato flakes in Zambia to improve micronutrient consumption • Nutrition rehabilitation with potato flakes in Burkina Faso food basket: possible additive effect for rehabilitation

  8. Summary • HIV is chronic, inflammatory disease with very individual risk-factors, complications, and intervention needs • Programming nutrition is challenging in current program settings with resource limitations • Experience from pilot and project information needs to be standardized to contribute to knowledge base • Experience can draw from general programs to be tested in HIV intervention settings

  9. Summary • Pilots and plans for adjustment and scale up could be included in existing and proposed programs • Private-public partnerships can bring innovation and technical expertise • Recommendations and requirements for may be more reasonably adopted if the reasoning is based on measurable results • If micro-modulatory recommendations are to be made, there is a need to show value in this context

More Related