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Free
ARVs available from next month
IRIN PlusNews
February 17, 2004
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=39532
HARARE - Government
hospitals in Zimbabwe's two major urban centres, Harare and Bulawayo,
will start providing free antiretroviral (ARV) drugs next month,
in partnership with UNAIDS, the World Health Organisation (WHO)
and the local health ministry.
The programme,
unveiled last week, is part of WHO's "Three by Five" vision of providing
three million people globally with access to ARVs by 2005.
"The Three by
Five programme is part of our efforts in assisting the Zimbabwean
government with the provision of antiretrovirals," WHO country representative
to Zimbabwe, Everisto Njelesani, was quoted as saying.
He added that
health personnel were already being trained in the administration
of ARVs, and the drugs would be rolled out to other parts of Zimbabwe
as the scheme expanded.
However, Zimbabwean
AIDS activists said there were significant challenges to implementing
the programme.
Lynde Francis,
founder of The Centre, an organisation providing treatment, care
and counselling for people living with HIV/AIDS, said the first
requirement, before making ARVs available, was to revive the collapsing
health sector - undermined by a lack of funding, low staff morale
and the exodus of skilled staff to other countries.
"Our health
delivery system is in such a shambles that drugs for some opportunistic
infections cannot be found," Francis said. "The need to administer
ARVs would be reduced drastically if areas like the prevention of
mother-to-child transmission were given attention," she pointed
out.
"The [implementation]
committee is full of learned professors and doctors, but there are
no women or people living with HIV - how can they be passionate
about implementing the Three by Five programme if they are not affected
by AIDS?" asked Francis, who has lived with the virus for 18 years.
Believe Dhliwayo,
coordinator of Zimbabwe Activists on HIV and AIDS, questioned the
urban focus of the programme.
"Providing treatment
to urbanites first, ahead of rural dwellers, raises issues of human
rights," charged Dhliwayo. "The people in rural areas, whe re there
are vulnerable orphans being looked after by grandparents, should
be given first priority."
He noted that
there was an urgent need to educate both patients and health care
workers about ARVs - which are extremely powerful drugs and require
a strict regimen - before they were administered.
"The implementation
of the Three by Five initiative should be accompanied by an information
blitz, because there is a lot of vital information that patients
and health providers should have. Treatment literature on issues
like adherance and nutrition should be a priority before everything
else," said Dhliwayo.
An estimated
24.6 percent of Zimbabweans are HIV-positive, but very few are able
to afford the ARV medication that could extend their lives.
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