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Doubts over door-to-door testing campaign
PlusNews
March 15, 2012
http://www.plusnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=95084
Zimbabwe's ambitious
plan to offer an HIV test to every household in the country is not
yet under way but is already being met with scepticism by activists
who feel this is not a priority for the country, especially with
global HIV/AIDS funding on the decline.
Owen Mugurungi,
national coordinator of the HIV/AIDS and Tuberculosis Unit, told
IRIN/PlusNews the government wanted every sexually active Zimbabwean
to know their status by 2015 by bringing HIV testing closer to the
people. "We have not secured additional funds for this initiative
but I think that with the little available resources from the AIDS
Levy we can start with a pilot in a few districts. Lessons learnt
from the pilot programme will be used in the phased rollout of the
programme," he said.
The AIDS levy
- a 3 percent tax on income - has become a promising source of funding
for the country in recent years - an estimated US$20.5 million was
collected in 2010; with most of the money being used to purchase
antiretroviral (ARV) medication.
"Prevention,
prevention and prevention is the only way we can control the epidemic;
that is why HIV testing and counselling are critical," he
added.
HIV prevalence
in Zimbabwe has declined remarkably in recent years, dropping from
26 percent to 14 percent between 1997 and 2009; however, at 13 percent
now, it remains one of the highest in the world.
Tinashe Mundawarara,
programme manager for the HIV/AIDS, Human Rights and Law Project
at the Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights, warns of the possibility of compromising
on informed consent and confidentiality when testing is done on
a large scale.
"When
properly done, door-to-door testing has its advantages, for example,
reaching out to people who ordinarily face challenges in accessing
Voluntary Counselling and Testing," said Mundawarara. "When
this is not properly done, there are high chances of ostracism,
violence, stigma and abuse in the home because disclosure will take
new dimensions that are not anticipated given the complex scenario
of the home environment."
Door-to-door
testing was successfully piloted in Bushenyi District, in western
Uganda, between January 2005 and February 2007, reaching 63 percent
of all households. A study of the impact of the programme found
that the benefits of home counselling and testing were far-reaching.
But in 2008
Human Rights Watch and the AIDS and Rights Alliance for Southern
Africa (ARASA) jointly conducted research on Lesotho's "Know
Your Status" door-to-door testing campaign, which planned
to offer 1.3 million people an HIV test within two years. The report
found that many counsellors were ill-equipped to conduct HIV counselling
and testing, and the counselling they provided was often substandard,
raising concern about whether people's consent to test - or
their decision not to test - was actually informed.
Funding
questions
In addition,
the household testing campaign would require a lot of funding. "The
challenge here is whether to use resources for identifying new HIV-positive
clients for information or statistical purposes or to use the same
resources to provide treatment for those already identified who
need treatment now," Mundawarara said.
Activists have
also raised concerns about whether the testing campaign will go
beyond merely testing people, and whether it will motivate them
to change their sexual behaviours and also refer those testing positive
to treatment facilities.
At least 1.2
million people are estimated to be living with HIV in Zimbabwe.
Of these 347,000 are accessing treatment through the state-run programme,
while another 600,000 urgently need ARVs. With limited money to
scale up the provision of ARVs, the healthcare system would not
have the capacity to treat those testing positive during the campaign,
activists have cautioned.
According to
AIDS activist Tendayi Westerhof, the time for such campaigns has
long passed, and the government should be focusing on using the
little resources available to strengthen its treatment programme
and consolidate prevention strategies such as male circumcision
and condom distribution.
"It makes
economic sense that the little resources available must be focused
on the Prevention of Mother to Child Transmission and ARVs for people
living with HIV who are in urgent need of treatment. Zimbabwe is
among the 23 countries that are implementing the Global Plan towards
the elimination of new HIV infections among children by 2015 and
keeping their mothers alive."
But Mugurungi
insists government is focused on universal access to HIV prevention
and treatment in line with the Millennium Development Goals and
commitments of the UN High-Level Meeting on AIDS of June 2011.
"It would
be narrow-minded to focus on treatment while leaving out prevention.
After all, HIV testing and counselling is an entry point to HIV
care and treatment, support and mitigation, so those who are advocating
for more funds for treatment should be reminded that if people don't
know their status they will not access treatment and people will
continue to present late for treatment and might die, yet drugs
are available and stockpiled," said Mugurungi.
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