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Outline
of ZVITAMBO'S PMTCT work
ZVITAMBO
February 2004
Introduction
Since the start of the HIV epidemic, nearly 4 million children have
died of AIDS throughout the world. More than 90% of these infants
acquired the infection from their mother during pregnancy. Not only
is MTCT the primary cause of AIDS in children, it accounts for more
than 10% of all new infections each year.
In Zimbabwe,
the epidemic has escalated at an alarming rate resulting in the
country having one of the world's highest HIV infection rates: 25%
of its adult population (25-45 yr) are infected. Among antenatal
women the prevalence is even higher. Among HIV positive pregnant
women, about 30% will transmit the virus to their infant sometime
during pregnancy, delivery or breastfeeding. Thus, of the 372,000
babies born in Zimbabwe each year, some 120,900 are born to HIV
positive mothers and 36,270 will be infected with HIV unless interventions
to reduce MTCT are implemented.
Over the past
five years, affordable, feasible, and effective interventions for
reducing MTCT and prolonging quality survival among infected infants
and women in resource-limited settings have become available. These
include provision of antiretroviral drugs to HIV+ mothers and their
babies, modifying infant feeding practices, micronutrient supplementation,
and prophylaxis against opportunistic infection. A critical requirement
to success of these programs will be increasing awareness of MTCT
issues among men (husbands, partners, fathers) and gaining their
involvement in and support of the process. What remains is to build
the systems to deliver these interventions.
ZVITAMBO
The ZVITAMBO project started life as a randomized clinical trial
of the effect of large dose post-partum vitamin A supplementation
on infant mortality, breast milk transmission of HIV, and new maternal
HIV infections among 14,110 mother-baby pairs recruited shortly
after delivery in health facilities in and around the City of Harare.
Enrolment was completed in January 2000, and clinical follow up
ended in April 2001; data analysis, laboratory analysis, and reporting
of findings continue. To carry out ZVITAMBO, a physical infrastructure
of laboratories, clinics, and data management was established, and,
more importantly, a multi-disciplinary team acquired expertise and
experience relevant to addressing the complex problems of women
and children affected by HIV/AIDS. At peak workload, ZVITAMBO employed
175 people including nurse-counselors, laboratory technologists,
and information managers working together in an integrated system.
Of these, 10 people formed the leadership: 2 nurse midwives, a social
worker/counselor/nurse/midwife, 3 data management and analysis experts,
a paediatrician, a public health scientist, and an administrator/accountant.
Since October
2001 this group has been offering technical assistance to hospitals
wishing to incorporate, into their regular services, work directed
at preventing mother to child transmission of HIV. ZVITAMBO started
work with St Theresa's Hospital (Roman Catholic, Dominicans) in
Chirumhanzi (Midlands) towards the end of 2001, then with a group
of three mission hospitals (RC and Elim Pentecostalist) in Nyanga
North in October 2002, and with another group of three mission hospitals
(RC and Anglican) in Mutasa District in July 2003. Towards the end
of 2003 we began training and "jumpstarting" the three
Methodist hospitals of Mutambara (Chimanimani District), Nyadiri
(Mutoko) and Old Mutare (Mutasa). All these hospitals are all now
delivering "PMTCT" as an integral part of their services.1
The primary
objective of ZVITAMBO is to provide technical and material support
to about 20 rural mission hospitals for HIV care and prevention
services for women and children. The services provided include:
1. HIV counseling
and testing for antenatal women and their husbands.
2. Infant feeding education and counselling for all couples (HIV
positive, negative, and of unknown status).
3. Nevirapine prophylaxis for HIV positive women and their infants.
4. Cotrimoxazole prophylaxis for pregnant women with clinical
AIDS and for babies born to HIV+ women.
5. Micronutrient supplementation, to be reviewed in light of on-going
research findings.
6. Infant HIV testing (by PCR) at 6 months.
Funding
After initial "bridge" funding from Catholic Relief Services
(CRS), a 3 year grant was agreed with the Canadian International
Development Agency (CIDA) starting in April 2003. A mid-term review
of the project is expected to lead to a substantive extension.
Roles and
Responsibilities of Each Partner
ZVITAMBO
1. Training
ZVITAMBO provides training on counselling, technical information
on MTCT, clinical care specific to HIV/AIDS in women and children,
administration of drugs in the PMTCT program, care of the care-giver
(special focus on helping nurses cope with how HIV/AIDS affects
them personally), analysis of blood specimens by approved rapid
HIV test kits, preparation of infant blood samples for infant
HIV diagnosis; accurate and confidential record, and monitoring
and evaluation procedures and systems. Both intense initial training
and follow-up supportive training are provided.
2. Procurement
of supplies and equipment needed for PMTCT services
ZVITAMBO will facilitate delivery of HIV test kits and nevirapine,
both currently provided free to the GoZ. In extreme cases of shortages,
when the government is unable to supply, ZVITAMBO will make up
the shortfall. ZVITAMBO will provide other required supplies and
equipment needed for HIV testing, counselling materials and training
tools, cotrimoxazole and other priority drugs, and monitoring
and evaluation equipment and supplies, TV and video.
3. Monitoring
and evaluation
ZVITAMBO will provide on-going monitoring and evaluation of PMTCT
services delivered at each of the sites we support, providing
rapid feed back to the site, the PMTCT coordinator at the MoH,
and the donor, and taking swift action to rectify errors encountered.
4. Research
ZVITAMBO will conduct, as appropriate and relevant, and with partners
who are willing, operational and clinical research to learn how
to deliver PMTCT services better.
5. Logistics
ZVITAMBO will arrange transport of specimens from the sites to
Harare for external quality control and infant diagnosis.
6. Salary
support
ZVITAMBO provides salary support for 2-4 local staff - especially
auxiliary staff local to the area who can relieve nurses and lab
technologists, freeing them to carry out PMTCT activities.
Partner Hospital
1. Implementation
Assume responsibility for implementing the program: recruit and
pay salaries of most staff to carry out the additional responsibilities
of the MTCT program.
2. Negotiations
Carry out all negotiations with local and national authorities
(government and church).
3. Liaison
and Community mobilisation
On-going liaison with health clinics in the district in collaboration
with the District Nursing Officer, Community Sister, Provincial
Medical Director (PMD), and community leadership, keeping them
informed about the PMTCT program and updating them on its progress.
4. Integration
Integrate PMTCT activities into other HIV/AIDS programs as planned
with ZVITAMBO support. Liaise with other local ASOs. Refer clients
from PMTCT to other services as appropriate.
5. Reporting
Generate and submit statistical reports to ZVITAMBO. Generate
and submit other reports as required by local ministry, government,
or church authorities.
Successes
Hospitals which have severe resource limitations have enthusiastically
and successfully integrated PMTCT work into their regular MCH/FCH
work.
Uptake (ie proportion
of mothers accepting HIV testing) has been 80-90% in some hospitals
with 90+% of HIV+ mothers and their babies being given nevirapine.
Progressive collaboration with the district teams involved in PMTCT
work at government hospitals and clinics has occurred.
Hospital staff
have reported that after some months of PMTCT work at the hospital
the level of stigma surrounding HIV/AIDS in the community has perceptibly
lessened.
Challenges
The degree to which the Community has been sensitised has been a
significant factor in uptake in some areas.
Postnatal follow up during the critical phases of infant feeding
is very difficult.
In some hospitals staff shortages are so extreme that the additional
burden of PMTCT counseling is problematic.
ZVITAMBO's
philosophy aims to embrace
- (1) Ownership
- of the work by the hospital,
- (2) Partnership
- between hospital and ZVITAMBO,
- (3) Integration
- of PMTCT activities into regular hospital work,
- (4) Quality
- of work,
- (5) Investment
- by both partners, especially in energy and time at the outset,
- (6) Sustainability
- such that if ZVITAMBO left, high quality PMTCT work would continue.
The field of
PMTCT work is new and changing rapidly, both in terms of scientific
advances and in the attempt to "scale up" services to
full national coverage. ZVITAMBO intends to maintain a flexible
approach to the development of partnerships in terms of their scope
and their detailed content. The intention is to work with mission
hospitals to incorporate into their regular services, effective
high quality work aimed at mitigating the effects of the HIV epidemic.
1 As of May
and June 2004 ZVITAMBO has begun working with 4 Mission Hospitals
in Masvingo Province: Morgenster (Reformed Church, Masvingo District),
Musiso (Catholic, Zaka), Silveira and Mashoko (respectively Catholic
and Church of Christ, Bikita).
Visit the Zvitambo
fact sheet
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