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PPTCT as an entry point to AIDS care in Africa
Women
and AIDS Support Network (WASN)
September 30, 2002
With advances
in science and technology that have seen the discovery of drugs
such as Nevirapine and Zidovudine (AZT), which reduce vertical transmission
of HIV, has come many arguments for and against prevention of parent-to-child-transmission
(PPTCT) of HIV.
Opponents of
PPTCT have argued that the drugs are toxic, result in an increase
in the number of orphans and use women as safe passages to deliver
healthy babies, while neglecting the mothers and offering nothing
tangible to sustain or prolong their lives.
However, proponents
of PPTCT argue that this could actually be the entry point to AIDS
care in Africa.
According to
Ugandan AIDS activist, Millie Katana, PPTCT ought to be used as
an entry point to achieving everything else that activists have
failed to get in their fight for treatment and care.
Outlining the
benefits of this strategy, Katana predicts that PPTCT will help
to reduce infections by about 25 percent by the year 2004. Further
to this, it will significantly reduce denial and ostracism among
people with HIV/AIDS.
In addition,
it has helped to break ground for treatment by making people realize
that drugs are part of treatment. Furthermore, there is an increase
in awareness on how to deal with HIV.
She further
argues that PPTCT has opened ground for testing with rapid tests
that are widespread being available where there were not Voluntary
Counselling and Testing (VCT) facilities in the past.
"For people
who used to ask, what’s in it for me if I get tested, the fact that
they want to protect their babies has been reason enough to test,"
she says, adding that PPTCT has also reduced fear of infection to
babies.
Because the
regimen, Nevirapine, is simple to use, people who are not specialists
can administer it. This has helped to prove that AIDS treatment
is not as complicated as the opponents of treatment have tried to
make it seem. Those who are opposed to giving Africans treatment
have often argued that Africans cannot follow instructions and cannot
tell when it is time to take their medication. However, successes
in the use of PPTCT have disproved such claims.
Countering the
argument that PPTCT will increase the number of orphans when their
mothers die of AIDS, Katana states that there are now some new programmes
called Prevention of Parent-to-child-transmission (PPTCT) plus,
which make treatment accessible to the mother. As a result, she
says, many African governments are beginning to include treatment
in their budgets.
Citing Uganda
as an example, Katana says that the country has allocated money
for the treatment of mothers and children who are HIV positive.
In support of
Katana’s views, a South African medical practitioner who declined
to be identified, says that it is important to have a PPTCT programme
because it allows doctors to diagnose women while they are still
healthy. This enables people living with HIV to start looking after
themselves early by adopting healthy lifestyles, rather than wait
and discover their status when they are sick and have to go on antiretroviral
treatment.
It has also
been noted that mothers who give birth to negative children are
likely to find that as an inspiration to take better care of themselves
so that they can live long enough to look after those children.
The child, it has been argued, is enough to give the mother a reason
to live.
However, despite
the strides that have been made and the benefits that can be realised
in treatment as a result of PPTCT, Katana says there is still need
for a lot of work to be done around the issue.
First, she says,
there is need to intensify prevention campaigns as reducing transmissions
means existing resources will not be over-stretched. As a result
of this, the resources allocated to treatment can then be focused
on the existing infected.
"What happens
when you have many children and one piece of meat is that you have
to give each child a small piece, but if you have less children,
the few can get larger portions," she said, adding that the same
applies to resources allocated to treatment of HIV.
In addition,
Katana says many People Living with HIV/AIDS (PWA), are not aware
of existing treatment options and there is need to conduct a massive
treatment literacy exercise so that such people can begin to benefit
from the use of these drugs.
Further to this,
she says, some medical practitioners lack information about HIV
treatment and there is need to educate them on this.
"Some medical
practitioners’ only knowledge of communicable diseases is malaria,"
she jocularly adds.
Concluding her
views, Katana calls for a total paradigm shift from mere rhetoric
to action that will bring real results.
"We have done
everything else during the past 20 years, we need to make AIDS care
and treatment part and parcel of the AIDS intervention," she says.
However, in
both the battle for PPTCT and access to treatment and care, Katana
says there is need to justify why people need treatment and this
can be done by justifying the cause for saving lives.
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fact
sheet
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