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Nurses step up to initiate HIV treatment
PlusNews
October 16, 2012
http://www.plusnews.org/Report/96561/ZIMBABWE-Nurses-step-up-to-initiate-HIV-treatment
Faced with the
ambitious target of reaching 85 percent of people in need of HIV
treatment by the end of 2012, the Zimbabwean government has announced
that nurses will be trained to prescribe and manage antiretroviral
(ARV) drug treatment.
Experts welcomed
the move but warned that nurses would have to be adequately prepared
and supported to take on the additional duties. Previously, nurses
were allowed only to administer the drugs after a doctor had prescribed
them. Now, changes made in the job descriptions of nurses by the
Nurses' Council of Zimbabwe will see them prescribing the
medication.
"Those
nurses that have received training on the management of patients
living with HIV and drug administering will be allowed to take up
this responsibility. The government, with the support of its partners,
began this training many years ago, and the training is actually
still ongoing. I need to point out that it's not enough that a professional
council allow nurses to administer drugs; this should be followed
up with measures to capacitate nurses to do this work correctly,"
stressed Owen Mugurungi, head of HIV/AIDS and TB in the Ministry
of Health and Child Welfare.
Expanding
reach
With doctors
in short supply, many people living with HIV are forced to wait
long periods before they can start taking ARVs. This is particularly
problematic for those living in rural areas, where doctors often
serve more than one health facility, and are likely to visit each
facility only once or twice a month.
"It is
cost-effective and can deliver effective community-based care to
people living with HIV by expediting treatment roll-out and increasing
access to treatment, as nurses have more daily contact with patients
than doctors," said Itai Rusike, executive director of the
Community Working
Group on Health.
In 2010, a South
African study divided HIV patients into two groups - one received
ARV therapy from doctors, the other from nurses. Both the nurses
and doctors had been inexperienced in ARV management and received
similar training from clinicians, who were on call for the duration
of the study to answer questions. After 120 weeks, the patients
managed by nurses were no more likely to have been lost to follow-up,
to have failed treatment or to have died than those under a doctor's
care.
Concerns
However, Rusike
noted that adding to nurses' responsibilities comes with its
own challenges, including possible work overload and burnout and
the need to increase payment for staff and training.
The government,
facing inadequate resources and already struggling to pay civil
servants' salaries, recently froze the recruitment of nurses.
Although the training of nurses will continue, this freeze has greatly
affected service delivery at public health facilities.
Activists have
also raised concerns about the supply of ARVs. "Our biggest
challenge in Zimbabwe has been the erratic availability of ARVs
or drug stock-out," said Rusike. "This may also increase
nurses' frustrations, especially at the primary-care level,
where there is poor drug distribution thereby affecting continuity
for patients initiated on ART [antiretroviral therapy]. The resulting
consequence can be drug resistance."
"We have
heard numerous stories of drug stock-outs in some provinces, of
people on treatment sharing drugs as a result, and of even drugs
expiring while some people are dying from lack of access to treatment.
This is very disturbing, and it must be addressed," warned
Stanley Takaona of the Zimbabwe HIV/AIDS Activist Union.
An audit released
in May by the comptroller and auditor-general's department revealed
that ARV drugs had expired on the shelves of public health facilities.
But with a US$84
million grant by the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and
Malaria, the country will put in place a six-month ARV buffer stock
to prevent treatment interruptions for the 480,000 patients currently
receiving the medication. The funding will also cover the cost of
ARVs for an additional 10,000 new patients to help Zimbabwe reach
its 85 percent coverage goal by the end of the year.
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