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ZIMBABWE:
Calls for decentralisation of ARV programmes
IRIN
News
May 18, 2004
BULAWAYO - A government
decision to distribute anti-AIDS drugs at two of Zimbabwe's largest urban
hospitals has been criticised because the majority of people in need of
antiretroviral (ARV) drugs live in rural areas.
As Zimbabwe moves
towards its third decade of the AIDS pandemic, more people are falling
sick and there is a greater need for care and treatment in rural areas,
where it is estimated that over 70 percent of people living with HIV/AIDS
are located.
The lack of voluntary
counselling and testing (VCT) centres, said Shadreck Ndhlovu, coordinator
of the Binga rural District AIDS Action Committee in Matabeleland North
province, makes precise data on the HIV/AIDS prevalence in most rural
areas extremely difficult to obtain.
There is only one
district hospital in Binga, and it provides VCT services for antenatal
clients only. But evidence in two of the most remote and poorest provinces
in Zimbabwe point to a rising AIDS epidemic in the rural areas.
Veronica Nkomo (67),
a home-based care volunteer in the Mangwe district in Matabeleland South
province, told PlusNews that "in almost every village an average of 12
people are bedridden and need some urgent attention, but there is nothing
we can do for them, except pray for them. Most times our home-based care
kits do not even have painkillers to relieve their pain".
Against this backdrop,
there are rising demands that palliative drugs, VCT services and ARVs
be rolled out urgently in rural areas.
Although not a cure,
ARVs inhibit replication of the HI virus that leads to AIDS, and boost
the immune system's ability to fight infections. In countries where the
anti-AIDS drugs have been widely available to people living with HIV/AIDS
since 1996, the medication has led to a dramatic reduction in HIV/AIDS-related
illnesses and deaths.
Edwin Ndlela, a secondary
school teacher in the Nkayi rural district, said the government should
have given first priority to the rural areas.
"Logic follows that
a service should be given to the area that has the greatest need, and
in Zimbabwe it is a well-known fact that the largest number people living
with HIV/AIDS is found in the rural areas ... ARVs are therefore needed
most in the rural areas," he said.
The Zimbabwean government
has said it would be difficult to provide ARV therapy (ART) in rural areas
because of limited infrastructure.
However, AIDS activist
Lynde Francis was quoted in the official Sunday Mail newspaper as saying
that "it seems they [government] are trying to roll out free antiretroviral
drugs in places where they are gunning for political support".
While the questions
of priority are important, the vast majority of people living with HIV/AIDS
lack even the most basic health care and support services. Drugs that
treat opportunistic infections are unavailable in hospitals countrywide,
due to the country's economic problems.
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