1 / 52

Overview of HIV/AIDS in Ethiopia

Overview of HIV/AIDS in Ethiopia. HIV Care and ART: A Course for Healthcare Providers. Learning Objectives. Describe the global and national HIV/AIDS epidemiological profile

marly
Télécharger la présentation

Overview of HIV/AIDS in Ethiopia

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. Overview of HIV/AIDS in Ethiopia HIV Care and ART: A Course for Healthcare Providers

  2. Learning Objectives • Describe the global and national HIV/AIDS epidemiological profile • Describe the Ethiopian national AIDS strategies, guideline for implementation of ART, and roadmap to accelerate care and treatment for PLWHA • List the major achievements, challenges and opportunities during the implementation of the ART program in Ethiopia

  3. Learning Objectives (2) • Explain the Ethiopian National Policy on ARV drugs, supply and use • Convey the current status of the ART program in Ethiopia • List prevention strategies to reduce the spread of HIV infection in the country

  4. Global and Ethiopian Summary of HIV/AIDS Epidemic

  5. Global Summary of the AIDS Epidemic, December 2005 • PLWHA 40.3 million (36.7 – 45.3) • Adults 38.0 Million (34.5-42.6) • Women 17.5 Million (16.2-19.3) • Children <15 yrs 2.3 Million (2.1-2.8) • New infections 4.9 million (4.3–6.6) • Adults 4.2 Million (3.6-5.8) • Children <15 yrs 700,000 (630,000 – 820,000) • AIDS Deaths 3.1 million (2.8 – 3.6) • Adults 2.6 Million (2.3 – 2.9 million) • Children <15 yrs (570,000-670,000)

  6. 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 Estimated number of adults and children living with HIV by region, 1986–2005 Oceania Million North Africa & Middle East Eastern Europe & Central Asia Latin America and Caribbean Number of people living with HIV North America and Western Europe Asia Sub-Saharan Africa 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 Year Source: WHO/UNAIDS, 2006

  7. Est. Number Newly Infected With HIV During 2005: 4.9 Million Western Europe 21,000 Eastern Europe & Central Asia 210,000 North America 44,000 East Asia & Pacific 290,000 North Africa & Middle East 92,000 South & South-East Asia 890,000 Caribbean 53,000 Sub-Saharan Africa 3.1 million Latin America 240,000 Australia & New Zealand 5,000 Source: UNAIDS/WHO

  8. Global HIV prevalence in adults, 2005 Source: WHO/UNAIDS, 2006

  9. Est. Adult and Child Deaths From HIV/AIDS During 2005: 3.1 Million Western Europe 65,000 Eastern Europe & Central Asia 60,000 North America 16,000 North Africa & Middle East 28,000 East Asia & Pacific 51,000 Caribbean 36,000 South & South-East Asia 490,000 Sub-Saharan Africa 2.3 million Australia & New Zealand 700 Latin America 95,000 Source: UNAIDS/WHO

  10. Source: UNAIDS/WHO 2004

  11. 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Percent of adults (15+) living with HIV who are female 1990–2005 Sub-Saharan Africa Caribbean GLOBAL Percent female (%) Latin America Asia Eastern Europe and Central Asia 1990 1995 2000 2005 Year Source: WHO/UNAIDS. [2006 Report on the global AIDS epidemic, UNAIDS]

  12. Number of people on antiretroviral therapy in low- and middle-income countries, 2002–2006 1800 1600 People receiving therapy (thousands) North Africa and the Middle East 1400 Europe and Central Asia 1200 East, South and South-East Asia 1000 Latin America and the Caribbean 800 Sub-Saharan Africa 600 400 200 0 Mid- 2006 End 2002 Mid- 2003 End 2003 Mid- 2004 End 2004 Mid- 2005 End 2005 Source: WHO/UNAIDS (2005). [Progress on global access to HIV antiretroviral therapy: An update on “3 by 5.” ] [Updated with 2006 data, WHO/UNAIDS]

  13. Ethiopian Prevalence • National single point estimate (SPE) ......... 2.1% • National Prevalence for 2005 ........... 4.7% • Women….5.0% • Men….3.8% • Urban prevalence in 2005...................12.5% • Urban prevalence SPE in 2006 …… 7.7% • Rural prevalence in 2005................... .3.0% • Rural SPE prevalence 2006 ………….0.9%

  14. HIV/AIDS Indicators in Ethiopia (2006)Bases on single point estimate • Number of PLWHA 929,699 • Estimated new annual infection 122,971 • PLWHA requiring ARVs 244,835 • Annual AIDS deaths 88,997 • Adults and Children on ART • Ever started 122,243 • Current on ART 90,212 • Pediatrics 4484 (January 10, 2008)

  15. HIV/AIDS Indicators in Ethiopia (2006) (2)Single point estimation • Total orphans 5,401,636 • AIDS orphans 656,058 • Children living with HIV/AIDS 61,864 • New HIV infections……… 13,836 • Annual AIDS deaths in children 10,887 • Children newly needing ART 14,396 • Children on ART >4000

  16. Age & Sex Distribution of Reported AIDS Cases (1986 - June 2003, Ethiopia) Source: AIDS in Ethiopia, 5th ed., MOH, July, 2004

  17. Impact on Rural Households • Loss of income (50% or more) • Loss of labor • Loss of skilled manpower and knowledge • Loss of land • Loss of remittances • Reduction in savings and investment • Expenses for treatment, funeral, teskar • Need to sell livestock to meet expenses

  18. Impact on Industry • Loss of workers • Expenses for recruiting and training replacements • Reduced productivity in cases of skilled workers or managers • Lost work days due to sickness and funeral leave • Increased health care costs • 50% illness due to AIDS • Loss of skilled professionals

  19. National response to HIV/AIDS in Ethiopia

  20. Historical Overview of HIV/AIDS in Ethiopia • 1984: The first evidence of HIV infection in Ethiopia • 1986: The first two AIDS cases reported to the Ministry of Health • 1989: HIV/AIDS surveillance started • 2003: Fee base ART started • March, 2005: Free ART program started

  21. Background on • Health Services • 138 hospitals • 650 Health centers • 6175 health posts • Access to HIV/AIDS Services • ART 260 (117 HP & 143 HC) • HCT 889 • PMTCT 390 health facilities are providing HIV services

  22. National Comprehensive and Expanded Response against HIV.AIDS Epidemic • HAPCO was established in 2000 • Policies and Strategy documents that are issued • HIV/AIDS policy in 1998 (currently on revision) • ARV drug supply and use developed in 2002 • 5 Years strategic planning was developed (SPM) with a principle of the three ones (one plan one budget one report) • Road map developed (2007-2010) : As part of the national ART scale up and implemented

  23. National Comprehensive and Expanded Response against HIV.AIDS Epidemic • National M&E Frame developed and implemented • HIV/AIDS Multi Sectoral Response Framework (2001-2005) • Social Mobilization strategy focusing on community response. • Various Program Implementation guidelines and manuals (PMTCT, STI, HCT, pediatrics , Social mobilization etc)

  24. VCT Site Distribution by Region, 2005

  25. VCT Before and After ART VCT not much benefited from free ART program

  26. Missed opportunity - VCT Absence of ART at most Health centers, private sectors, NGO clinics

  27. ART Site Expansion Versus Target 2006 >100%

  28. Why Missed opportunity • Absence of ART at most • Health Centers (Gov.) • Private Health facilities • Lack of knowledge about ART • Poor referral and linkage system • Stigma and discrimination • Poor involvement of community and PLWHA

  29. Regional Distribution of ART

  30. PMTCT – Achievement 105 6 75 4758 37 0 0 53016 1700

  31. National Response • HIV/AIDS Policy formulated by MOH and adopted by the Council of Ministers in 1998 • Enabled HIV/AIDS prevention and control • Supplemented existing health, women’s, and education and training policy • Called for a multisectoral response • Guaranteed rights of PLWHA • ARV Drugs Supply & Use Policy formulated July 2002

  32. National Response (2) • HIV/AIDS Prevention & Control Office (HAPCO) established June 2002 • Restructured from NACS (April 2000) • Sits under Prime Minister’s Office • Established at all levels of government • Runs the daily activities of NAC • Resource mobilization • Advocacy • Coordination of the sectoral responses

  33. National Response (3) • HIV/AIDS Strategic plan for five years • 2004 - 2008 • Social mobilization & community involvement • Community ownership • Scaled up ART program • AIDS fund was initiated • Free ART program was scaled up

  34. HIV/AIDS Intervention Strategies • Prevention • Social mobilization • IEC/BCC • HIV counseling and testing • Voluntary (VCT) • Provider initiated (PIHCT) • STI prevention and control • Condom promotion • Infection prevention • Prevention of mother to child transmission (PMTCT) • Post exposure prophylaxis

  35. HIV/AIDS Intervention Strategies (2) • Care and Treatment • Palliative care • Community home based care • Opportunistic infection treatment • Tuberculosis treatment • Treatment of AIDS patients • Support for • Orphans and vulnerable children (OVC) • People living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA)

  36. Major Achievements • National HIV/AIDS Policy • National AIDS Council Secretariat • Five editions of “AIDS in Ethiopia” • National ARV Policy (revised and published in January 2005) • Roadmap to accelerate access to HIV/AIDS care and treatment • M&E framework

  37. Major Achievements (2) • Five-year strategic plan revised & updated • Used as main input for the National Strategic Framework adopted by NAC • Contains strategic outline of interventions at federal and regional levels • Key guidelines developed: • HIV Surveillance Guideline • HIV Surveillance Training Manual • Voluntary Counseling & Testing Guideline

  38. Major Achievements (3) • Key guidelines (continued): • AIDS Case Management Guideline • STI Management Guideline • Home-Based Care Guideline • Private HIV Labs Licensing Guideline • PMTCT Guideline • Home Care Training Manual • Counseling Training Manual • ARV Guideline • Universal Precautions & Post Exposure Prophylaxis

  39. Major Achievements (4) • >900 VCT sites established • 163 sentinel surveillance sites established • MOH has been the primary advocate for a multi-sectoral response to HIV/AIDS: • Formulated and disseminated HIV/AIDS and ARV Drugs Supply & Use Policies • Acts as a catalyst for several multi-sectoral HIV/AIDS committees that pre-dated the NAC

  40. Major Achievements (5) • Integrating HIV/AIDS into health programs: • Reproductive health • Mother and child health • Hospital hygiene • Health education • Integrated disease surveillance • TB/HIV Initiative

  41. Policy of ARV Supply and Use in Ethiopia

  42. Introduction • Care and support of PLWHA plays an important role in preventing the spread of HIV/AIDS • ART is an important component of care for PLWHA • ARVs also have an important place in PMTCT and PEP • ARVs have enormous benefits, but affordability, toxicity, adherence and resistance are challenging

  43. National ARV Policy • Policy approved in July 2002 • Objectives of the policy: • Reduce MTCT • Prolong and improve the quality of lives of PLWHA • Reduce accidental HIV infection within health institutions

  44. General Policy • Determines type of ARVs that will be used in health care services • The Government of Ethiopia: • Coordinates & facilitates the supply of ARVs • Builds capacity for making available safe, effective and quality antiretroviral drugs, and for ensuring proper use of these drugs • Ensures sustainable supply of ARVs by encouraging involvement of all stakeholders

  45. General Policy (2) • The Government of Ethiopia (cont): • Nurtures international partnerships to strengthen sustainable supply and use of ARVs • Encourages research on modern and traditional HIV/AIDS treatment • Establishes strong systems to monitor ARV supply and use

  46. General Strategies • Selection of ARVs • Determine the type of ARVs to be used in Ethiopia • Incorporate selected ARVs into the national drug list • Permit the import of ARVs that are not included in the national drug list

  47. General Strategies (2) • Supply of ARVs • ARVs for ART: • Exempted from taxation • Supplied at reduced prices through government negotiation with manufacturers, importers and distributors • Purchased by a system of bulk and generic substitution • Local production of ARVs encouraged • Benefaction of ARVs facilitated by the Ethiopian Government • Ethiopian Government supplies ARVs for PMTCT

  48. General Strategies (3) • Drug Use • Prepare and implement standardized prescription paper • Prepare and implement national guidelines for safe and effective use of ARVs • Sustainable public education on ARV drugs

  49. General Strategies (4) • Research and Development • Government of Ethiopia encourages research on modern and traditional HIV/AIDS treatment • Government of Ethiopia shall make efforts to strengthen the capacity of research institutions • Rights and benefits of citizens that enroll in research studies shall be respected • National and international ethical norms and values in human experimentations shall be observed

  50. Scaling up ART Uptake • Need capacity development to: • Initiate treatment • Help patients adhere to their treatment regimens • Monitor the efficacy and toxicity of the regimens • Diagnose treatment failure • Monitor overall resistance in society • ART program must be implemented at Health Center level • Nursing initiative to prescribe ARVs is being piloted

More Related