Sunday, July 28, 2019

Key Populations (KP) And Fistula, What Is The Link?


When one hears of Fistula, the next thing that comes to mind could be pregnancy and childbirth. 

But, all of us should be concerned.

There is a vulnerability and susceptibility in the event one is sexually active before the age of 18 years,  a victim of physical assault, rape, engages in use of sex toys, inserting or stashing objects in the vagina and anus during sexual play, torture or as a result of hiding objects that may be contraband.

But, why should Key Populations (KP) be exceedingly concerned?

There are six reasons why KP should be emancipated enough to contribute to reduction of Fistula cases in their communities.

  1. It is treatable and those who seek care go on to lead confident fulfilling lives.
  2. It affects a big number of people than previously known.
  3. Contributing to its reduction, means improving health and achievement of the SDGs.
  4. You may be called upon to take care of someone after surgery. You need to know what they go through.
  5. It does not hurt to know or be informed about Fistula.
  6. Because you may be a human Rights Defender and your task is to advocate for dignity of all persons. 

According to the WHO (2019) report, Obstetric fistula is preventable; it can largely be avoided by:
  • delaying the age of first pregnancy;
  • the cessation of harmful traditional practices; and
  • timely access to obstetric care.


There are many resources one can use to get information on fistula condition. In a resource by Amie (2019), symptoms and types of fistula are listed.

Symptoms:

Symptoms of fistulas vary depending on their location and severity. However, some symptoms are common in most cases. People often feel very unwell and run a fever. They also feel pain or tenderness at the site of the fistula. Itching may develop, especially if the fistula involves skin. Fistulas often exude pus, which may have an unpleasant or foul smell.

Risk Factors: 

Certain conditions place a person at a higher risk of developing a fistula. Crohn's disease and diverticular disease are two conditions highly likely to cause fistulas. Around one in three people with Crohn's disease will get a fistula at some point. Certain cancer therapies, in particular, radiation therapy, can make fistulas more likely to form. An unusual cause of enterovaginal fistulas is obstructed labor when doctors delay intervention for too long. This is rare in the United States as women usually receive a high level of care during childbirth.

Sepsis: 

If left untreated, fistulas can become chronic. They can also cause sepsis, a potentially life-threatening condition that develops when the immune reacts to an infection. Symptoms of sepsis include a high-grade fever, a rash, and confusion. It can also result in a fast heart and breathing rate. Sepsis is a medical emergency and requires immediate hospital treatment.


Treatment with Enteral Diet:

Doctors may prescribe enteral diets to those with fistulas in the small or large intestines. When a person is on an enteral diet, they will consume only liquid food for a period. They may require a feeding tube. This type of diet ensures one receives all the nutrients they need without taking in any solid food, thus reducing the amount of stool passing through the intestines and rectum. With this treatment, the fistula has a chance to heal and may even close on its own.

Surgical Intervention:

If the fistula is large or does not respond to less invasive treatments, it will require surgical removal or repair. Where possible, surgeons will use laparoscopic methods, inserting cameras and tools through very small incisions. However, some fistulas require transabdominal surgery involving larger incisions in the abdominal wall. In some cases, a fistula may develop in a diseased part of the bowel. Doctors may resection the bowel and remove the diseased section, including the fistula. In this situation, the person may require a pouch after surgery. This will temporarily divert stool away from the resectioned area to give it time to properly heal.


Statistics: 

Preventing and managing obstetric fistula contribute to the Sustainable Development Goal 3 of improving maternal health.

According to fistualfoundation.org, there are over one million women suffering from obstetric fistula worldwide. Fistula is most prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa and Asia.

Fewer than 6 in 10 women in developing countries give birth with any trained professional, such as a midwife or a doctor. When complications arise, as they do in approximately 15% of all births, there is no one available to treat the woman, leading to disabling injuries like fistula, and even death.

The root causes of fistula are grinding poverty and the low status of women and girls. In developing countries, the poverty and malnutrition in children contributes to the condition of stunting, where the girl’s skeleton, and therefore pelvis as well, do not fully mature. This stunted condition can contribute to obstructed labor, and therefore fistula.

Obstetric fistula is both preventable and treatable. It can be prevented if laboring women are provided with adequate and timely emergency obstetric care when complications arise. Once a fistula has developed, however, the only cure is surgical treatment.


In the WHO (2019) report, each year between 50,000 to 100,000 women worldwide are affected by obstetric fistula. The development of obstetric fistula is directly linked to one of the major causes of maternal mortality: obstructed labour.

Women who experience obstetric fistula suffer constant incontinence, shame, social segregation and health problems. It is estimated that more than 2 million young women live with untreated obstetric fistula in Asia and sub-Saharan Africa.


Definitions:

The most common fistulas are listed. A fistula occurs when two organs or structures within the body form an abnormal connection. Fistulas can begin in various ways, but many start as an abscess. Abscesses are pus-filled pockets of tissue. Gradually, the abscess may fill with a bodily fluid such as urine. After a while, the abscess invades another structure in the body. This connects the two structures and forms a fistula. You can think of it as a tunnel that should not be there. Fistulas are most common in the abdomen but can occur anywhere in the body. 

Enterocutaneous fistulas connect the small intestine to the skin. They often result from surgical complications. 
Enteroenteric or enterocolic fistulas involve either the small or large intestine connecting to another structure in the body. 
Enterovaginal fistulas are fistulas involving the vagina. 
Enterovesicular fistulas enter the bladder and can cause the person to contract frequent urinary tract infections.

A fistula:

A fistula is a hole, or abnormal opening, in the birth canal, that results in chronic leakage of urine and/or feaces.

Obstetric Fistula:

 An abnormal opening between a woman’s genital tract and her urinary tract or rectum.

According to fistulacare.org, each year, more than a quarter million women die in pregnancy and childbirth. Of those that do not perish, an unknown number suffer long-term health problems. The maternal injury with perhaps the most devastating aftermath is obstetric fistula. 

Obstetric fistula due to obstructed labour is by far the most common form of genital fistula, constituting an estimated 80-90% of all genital fistula cases. 

Obstetric fistula is usually caused by several days of obstructed labor, without timely medical intervention or cesarean section. During this time, the soft tissues of the pelvis are compressed between the baby’s head and the mother’s pelvic bones. The lack of blood flow causes tissue to die, creating a hole between the mother’s vagina and bladder or between the vagina and rectum, or both, and resulting in leakage.

Left with chronic leaking, women with obstetric fistula are often abandoned or neglected by their husbands and families, unable to work, and ostracized by their communities. Women who develop obstetric fistula usually have had a stillbirth, so they must also deal with the loss of a baby. Women with fistula are often among the most impoverished and vulnerable members of society.

Iatrogenic Fistula:

Sometimes genital fistula can be caused unintentionally by a health care provider. This type of injury is called iatrogenic fistula. For instance, during a cesarean section, it is possible that the bladder is accidentally cut, resulting in a hole or abnormal opening through which urine leaks.

Iatrogenic fistula can also occur by accident during surgeries unrelated to childbirth. In many of the countries where we work, approximately 10-15% of the overall patient caseload is due to iatrogenic causes. Training surgeons and other health care staff in emergency obstetric care and other surgical skills is essential to preventing new cases of iatrogenic fistula.

Traumatic Fistula

Traumatic fistula is a condition that can occur as the result of sexual violence, often in conflict and post-conflict settings. There are no solid estimates of its prevalence, but traumatic gynecologic fistula can make up a significant part of the overall genital fistula caseload in places where sexual violence has been used as a weapon of war.

Rape, often aggravated by the thrusting of objects into the vagina or anus, can result in a hole between a woman’s vagina and bladder or rectum, or both, resulting in the leaking of urine and/or feces. 

Survivors of sexual assault may have additional, severe physical injuries and are at an increased risk for unwanted pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections, including HIV. 

Survivors live not only with chronic incontinence, but also with the psychological trauma and stigma of rape.

Fistula is life-shattering: Women contend with chronic incontinence and often are ostracized by their husbands, families, and communities. The good news is that fistula can be completely repaired up to 90% of the time if fistula survivors have access to a trained surgeon at a hospital providing fistula repair.

Beyond surgical repair, other needed support includes comprehensive counseling and physiotherapy, as needed, as well as treatment of concurrent disabilities. When repaired women leave a health facility, there is need to link them to community-based organizations that support their reintegration back into their community.

Human Rights Defenders Can Contribute to Prevention of Fistula

Prevention

Many of the approaches that prevent obstetric fistula are the same ones that make motherhood safer in general.  Engage with your community or advocate for improved Health facility services. Improving maternal health, strengthening obstetric care and facility-based prevention work focuses on:

Family Planning

Family Planning allows couples to delay early births, space desired births, and limit family size. Up to one-third of all maternal deaths and injuries could have been prevented if women had access to contraception. Family planning can also help women with a repaired fistula achieve a successful pregnancy, if that is their desire, by helping them delay a future pregnancy until they are fully healed. Women who have experienced repair are generally advised to abstain from sexual relations for a period of time to allow them to heal. In some situations, for some women find it difficult to comply with this recommendation. Other women may need a longer time before they are able to successfully sustain a pregnancy, and family planning methods can help couples determine when is the best time to get pregnant.

Promotion of the Partograph

The partograph is a low-tech tool for preventing and managing prolonged or obstructed labor, a significant cause of reproductive morbidity and mortality. It is a preprinted one-page form on which observations of the progress of labor and information about maternal and foetal condition are recorded. 

The partograph is designed to act as an “early warning system,” alerting doctors, midwives, and nurses to the need for action—e.g., referral to a higher level facility, labor augmentation, or cesarean section. Correct and consistent use of the partograph has the potential to reduce obstructed labor and its adverse consequences, including fistula.

Immediate Catheterization

If a woman with obstructed labour arrives at a hospital and is believed to be at risk for obstetric fistula, immediate catheterization can help to prevent the fistula from developing. The catheter should remain in place until well after the end of labour.

Cesarean Section

Timely Cesarean Section is critical for women with obstructed labor. Doctors performing a cesarean delivery must be competent so that they do not inadvertently create an iatrogenic fistula. Fistula Care Plus works with hospitals to ensure that quality cesarean sections are available from trained health professionals.

Community-Based Prevention

Be part o the effort preventing fistula at the community level. Activities include social mobilization and awareness-raising campaigns, dramas and broadcasts about the importance of antenatal care and assisted delivery, and support for transportation and referrals.

Remember, you too can contribute to preventing Fistula

For more you can follow these links:















Shout From The Rooftops: "Obstetric Fistula Is Treatable"


Obstetric fistula has gained much attention in Uganda, thanks to raised consciousness on maternal health and achieve the SDGs especially SDG 3.

Get involved for these three reasons:

  1. You can raise awareness on the causes of Obstetric Fistula and how to seek treatment
  2. You can contribute to your communities’ critical number of those who are willing to support women gaining optimal maternal health and achieving the SDGs
  3. You can make it easier for other members of the community to understand, get involved and participate in prevention of fistula

According to www.prb.org, childbearing poses many risks in Uganda, a largely rural country of 25 million people where the average number of children per woman is almost 7.

Trained medical professionals assist an estimated four in 10 births, and roughly 500 women die of childbirth-related complications for every 100,000 live births, according to the 2000/01 Uganda Demographic and Health Survey (UDHS). 

Although some 98 percent of pregnant women receive some level of antenatal care, the survey shows that only 42 percent make the four or more visits recommended by the health ministry. Infant and child deaths are also high. For every 1,000 live births, 88 children die before age 1 and 152 die before age 5.

Most fistula patients in Uganda, like those in other countries, are young and poor with little education and limited access to quality health care, including emergency obstetric care, according to the 2003 Baseline Assessment of Obstetric Fistula in Uganda. Often, patients lack the knowledge that the condition can be repaired and are too ashamed of their condition to seek help. Those who remain untreated may be shunned by their communities and relatives and must find new ways to support themselves.

With little access to healthcare and information about these kinds of risks, young people begin sexual activity and childbearing at an early age. More than half the population (52 percent) is below age 15, and 23 percent of women surveyed at ages 20 to 49 said that by age 15 they were already sexually active, according to the 2000/2001 UDHS. The median age at first sexual intercourse for women ages 20 to 49 was 17 years. 

The UDHS also showed that some 31 percent of teenagers had begun childbearing, an improvement over the 43 percent shown in the 1995 UDHS.

Early marriages, linked to social and religious customs among certain tribes, contribute to the high number of teenage pregnancies, since young brides become mothers soon after marriage. Although the minimum legal age for a woman to get married in Uganda is 18, the latest UDHS shows that 17 percent of women ages 20 to 49 at the time of the survey were married by the time they were 15, and more than half were married by age 1.

Most recent studies revealed that in Uganda, there are 1,900 new cases of obstetric fistula per year. There are between 75,000-100,000 who suffer Obstetric Fistula. 

From the UDHS (2000/01) statistics that gave 500/1,000 women die in childbirth, there has been been a small reduction to 438/1000 (UDHS 2011). 

According to the 2011 Demographic and Health Survey (DHS), 438 women die of birth-related causes for every 100,000 live births in Uganda, and for every woman who dies, six survive with chronic and debilitating ill health (UBOS & ICF International, 2012). Obstetric fistula, a devastating and frequent outcome of prolonged or unattended labor, is an example of this chronic ill health and a significant public health problem in Uganda. Although detailed data about obstetric fistula in Uganda are limited, the 2011 DHS estimated that 2% of Ugandan women aged 15–49 had experienced the condition (UBOS & ICF International, 2012). Obstetric fistula occurs when there has been a gap in maternal health care, preventive services, or community response. Addressing these gaps requires a concentrated and coordinated effort at the national and local levels (WHO, 2006). Surgeons, community leaders, hospital administrators, health care providers, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), and women needing services are distinct groups with their own needs. Organizing these groups requires leadership, and the Ministry of Health (MOH) is often best placed to provide centralized coordination among the various players to ensure that quality services are available.

Among the women screened and in need of the repair services, for severe rectovaginal  fistula (RVF) whose perennial tears resulting into constantly passing feaces or vesicovaginal fistula (VVF). Fistula,  is a childbirth injury resulting from unsupervised deliveries especially happening out of hospital.It costs between US$400 (about sh1.4 m) to have a fistula repair done; an amount that an average Ugandan woman cannot afford. The surgery lasts between 1-5 hours depending on the complexity of the case.

According to the UDHS 2011 report on the situation of fistula in Uganda, fistula prevalence stands at 4.0% in the western region. 

Globally, UNFPA reports that there are approximately 3.5 million cases of the fistula with up to 100, 000 new cases annually with the majority being in Sub-Saharan Africa and Asia.

In Uganda, UNFPA reports 1,900 new cases of fistula are still occurring every year.

In 2018, UNFPA supported more than 1100 fistula repair surgeries, contributing to 1829 fistula repairs done in Uganda.

Remember you too can get involved.

Get involved for these three reasons:


  1. You can raise awareness on the causes of Obstetric Fistula and how to seek treatment
  2. You can contribute to your communities’ critical number of those who are willing to support women gaining optimal maternal health and achieving the SDGs
  3. You can make it easier for other members of the community to understand, get involved and participate in prevention of fistula
For more follow these links please:








Saturday, July 27, 2019

Violence Against Women and Children And Affects Quality of RMNCAH Outcomes: Analysis of reports from 8 African Countries


Background: Effective and quality RMNCAH outcomes are linked to reduced risk to violence. This study explored negative stereotypes of hegemonic masculinity and the social structures linked to it. An exploration of 8 Sub-Saharan African countries found  country-specific definitive social structures impacting the stereotypes, i.e., Enabling; Restrictive; and Hindering structures.

According to MoH Guidelines on Maternal Nutrition in Uganda (2010), this includes all processes ensuring safer, optimal birth outcomes, maternal wellbeing, nutrition and autonomy for women to have opportunities for self care. Maternal malnutrition, sets in place an intergenerational cycle of maternal nutrition. Which in turn affects pregnancy, lactation, undernourishment in utero, low birth weight babies, stunted growth and adolescent pregnancies. 

 Violence as related to maternal health and nutrition here is all those actions that tend to discriminate against women’s maternal health and nutrition needs. They subsume women and elevate male needs. AT household level these come in the form of: aggression or such actions that are used to deliberately  deny a women or children access to resources that are life promoting, agency, set preservation and autonomy. According to WHO (2002), violence is “the intentional use of force or power, threatened or actual, against oneself, another person, or against a group or community that either results in, or has a higher likelihood of resulting in injury, death, psychological harm, maldevelopment or deprivation.”

Whether men seek consent before sexual intercourse; whether men are conscious of the notion of age of consent; precarious toxic masculinity practices and notion of transgression such as: gender role transgression, perceiving safer sex initiated by women as threats, tendencies for aggression to portray/power posturing, blocking or denying women access to resources (toxic custodianship) and silencing women by shaming feminine voicing ( toxic censorship).  According to Dr Olaro Charles, the Director Clinical and Community Services, “Women who give birth before age 20 are at greatest risk of fistula. Poor nutrition during a girl’s childhood can also cause stunted growth and increase her risk for fistula.”

One of the findings in a study by Kaye (2006) titled “Domestic violence as risk factor for unwanted pregnancy and induced abortion in Mulago Hospital, Kampala, Uganda,” was that pregnancy intentions have many causes: One is to pacify and aggressive male partner who may demand a child (virility) or for the woman to prove her fertility (fecundity). In other words, pregnancy intentions have social pressure causes too, on top of others.


 - d’Oliveira et al (2002) in a study titled “Violence against women in health-care institutions: an emerging problem,” argue that Maternal morbidity and mortality in childbirth also stems from violence committed by health workers in childbearing or abortion services, which affects health-service access, compliance, quality, and effectiveness.

 - The unavailability of formal recording and reporting tools that capture assault women face from their partners in domestic settings make it harder to generate accurate cross cultural estimates of wife assault because only a few countries have attempted a nationwide accounting. But the data that do exist give cause for concern according to Heise of cisas.org. 

 -Enlisting and emancipating women to report violence against them is one way violence will be checked. Whether or not women will participate fully is another matter. There is fear that if they voice, then they will exit their homes, which therefore means they prefer to take up silence and suffering. This has implications. According to (WHO 2013) report titled ‘Global and regional estimates of violence against women: prevalence and health effects of intimate partner violence and non-partner sexual violence,’ “Violence against women has consequences to women’s physical, mental and reproductive health. What is new is the growing recognition that acts of violence against women, violates the rights of women and girls, limits their participation in society, and damages their health and well-being. It is a global public health problem that affects approximately one third of women globally.”



Methods: Meta-analysis of data from 2000-2019 of relationship between violence against women and children, is reflected in reports generated during: Trauma Informed Care (TIC); comprehensive RMNCAH strategies such as IMNI, A/PNC, KMC, perinatal death review, and/or integrated maternal and perinatal death surveillance and response (MPDSR) processes; catalyze the well woman agency; enforcement of legal gender equality; religious and traditional support for respect and dignity of women; uptake of gender-specific prevention services; Domestic Violence (DV) reports and HIV Prevention. 170 articles and reports were identified but 80 met inclusion criteria.

Results: Stereotypes of hegemonic masculinity exist in all 8 countries studied. Politics, religion and tradition influence risk reduction, e.g., enforcement of legal gender equality, political commitment and accountable judiciary ensure women can report abuses. Male dominance beliefs; traditions e.g. precarious toxic masculinity, indifference to expectant mother health by males, stigmatization of frequent clinic visits; and gender of breadwinner are linked to violence-related risks. Compared to all 8 countries, Rwanda, Ethiopia and Kenya have a hindering structure promoting significant risk reduction with institutions fostering increased rule of law, political commitment to RMNCAH outcomes, enforcement and risk-reduction consciousness. Uganda and Tanzania have a restrictive structure characterised with legal loopholes, irregular enforcement and ambivalent political commitment to address acts of violence against women and children. In Senegal, South Africa and Nigeria political, religious and traditional factors blatantly backing traditional negative stereotypes of hegemonic masculinity foster violence enabling structures entrenching repressive acts and hate crimes against women and children. In all countries however, Delivery room reception; level of Health Information Management skills; HIV criminalization; affinity and sensitivity to quality health by all people; stigma around attending clinics by males; negotiating for safer sex by women which is circumscribed as a threat to male dominance, subvert or support optimal RMNCAH goals.

 These are precarious male identity and masculinity tendencies that are aggressive, abusive, silence the voice of women and children, use sexual, gender roles to posture and portray power. They are characterized as influencing sexual, gender, agency, autonomy roles. Through sexual roles, males expect and assume they are entitled to sexual intercourse at their will even if it meant without any form of protection. A precarious gender role situates the woman as the submissive kind who should not transgress that expectation. Gender transgression is construed as a threat to male identity and power. By precarious agency is meant that it is only males who are supposed to think on behalf of the family. If women demand things beyond what the male provides, this depicts him as a failed provider. A failed complex means that the man is inadequate and therefore feels threatened. Precarious autonomy, means that it is the males who are independent, get the prestige, respect, recognition and praise for all that is good and not the woman. The woman is dependent and so are all the children. This has implications on age of first sexual debut, how the woman’s input is sought when it does to planning the size of family, money and time set aside for maternal nutrition and self care. Power is derived from authority, economic, social, cultural and leadership positions.

According to the UNICEF’s Maternal And Health Disparities Uganda (2017), these negative and toxic male stereotypes contribute to higher numbers of adolescent pregnancies, higher Maternal Mortality Ratio and Neonatal mortality Rate (NMR).

According to MoH Guidelines on Maternal Nutrition in Uganda (2010), these included: preconception, pregnancy stage, lactation stage and recognising partner affinity to provide safe and optimal birth outcomes. The list included provisions such as: Folic acid; ensuring proper weight gain during pregnancy; Antenatal care; iron and folic acid supplementation; malaria and worm control to prevent anaemia; diet during pregnancy and lactation; Vitamin A Supplementation; Postnatal care and iron and folic acid supplementation; Iodine supplementation; Nutrition counselling and education; Breastfeeding and family planning; Education regarding local practices that negatively affect maternal nutrition; nutrition during emergencies.

Women emancipated and empowered to engage in safer sex negotiations, access to contraceptives, gain contraceptive-use expertise, provide peer education to other women who are contraceptive-use naive and ensure maternal health autonomy.


Conclusions: Safer and optimal birth outcomes are dependent on overarching social, political and economical dispensation. These manifest as: economic autonomy, religion and traditional backing which contribute effectively to overall risk-reduction as far as maternal nutrition and health are concerned. Contexts hindering violence prevail where state-led commitment thrives and these have far reaching benefits e.g., more people demand, access and benefit from RMNCAH outcomes. Effective and quality RMNCAH programming in the countries studied will be effective if it is designed to involve males and addresses hegemonic masculinity practices too. Mortality implementation audits need to be disaggregated to reflect causes of and contributing factors to deaths such as assault to women and lack of male involvement in practices promoting optimal birth outcomes.



Thursday, July 25, 2019

Structural As Well As Socio-cultural Contexts Play Major Supportive Or Subversive Roles On Stigma


In their study, “'Management of a spoiled identity': systematic review of interventions to address self-stigma among people living with and affected by HIV,” Pantelic et al (2019) highlighted what exactly entailed the structural disablers and enablers of stigma. 

Humans are self preserving at all costs, they develop habituation, work toward stability and sustainability. The processes require due diligence or due process. HIV Prevention is built around two forms of scaffolding: the structural and socio-cultural scaffoldings. These scaffoldings can be applied to stigma, discrimination and violence.

Socio-cultural disablers of stigma: dignity affirming statements, equality policy, non-discrimination policy, emancipation in diversity and inclusive advocacy skills. These are person-to-person related practices reducing as well as raising awareness about people who may not necessary look or behave like you.

BACKGROUND: Self-stigma, also known as internalised stigma, is a global public health threat because it keeps people from accessing HIV and other health services. By hampering HIV testing, treatment and prevention, self-stigma can compromise the sustainability of health interventions and have serious epidemiological consequences. This review synthesised existing evidence of interventions aiming to reduce self-stigma experienced by people living with HIV and key populations affected by HIV in low-income and middle-income countries.

METHODS: Studies were identified through bibliographic databases, grey literature sites, study registries, back referencing and contacts with researchers, and synthesised following Cochrane guidelines.

RESULTS: Of 5880 potentially relevant titles, 20 studies were included in the review. Represented in these studies were 9536 people (65% women) from Ethiopia, India, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Nepal, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, Thailand, Uganda and Vietnam. Seventeen of the studies recruited people living with HIV (of which five focused specifically on pregnant women). The remaining three studies focused on young men who have sex with men, female sex workers and men who inject drugs. Studies were clustered into four categories based on the socioecological level of risk or resilience that they targeted: (1) individual level only, (2) individual and relational levels, (3) individual and structural levels and (4) structural level only. Thirteen studies targeting structural risks (with or without individual components) consistently produced significant reductions in self-stigma. The remaining seven studies that did not include a component to address structural risks produced mixed effects.

CONCLUSION: Structural interventions such as scale-up of antiretroviral treatment, prevention of medication stock-outs, social empowerment and economic strengthening may help substantially reduce self-stigma among individuals. More research is urgently needed to understand how to reduce self-stigma among young people and key populations, as well as how to tackle intersectional self-stigma. For more please see this link.







Adolescents Who Are Health-Seeking Emancipated Have Higher Chances Of Retention in Care


Adolescents with HIV need to be rapidly linked to specialist care to have best chances of sustaining engagement with HIV services

Early engagement with Health professionals, creates rapport, enables beneficiaries to engage in self care, empowers them with knowledge of danger signs and symptoms and it affirms decisions for life promoting practices. 

In a study by Carter ( 2016), “adolescents newly diagnosed with HIV need to be rapidly incorporated into HIV care networks to have the best chances of remaining in care in the long term, research from the United States published in the June 1st edition of the Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes shows.

Worryingly, only 62% of newly diagnosed adolescents were linked and engaged in care within 22 weeks of referral following their diagnosis. However, adolescents with shorter intervals between diagnosis and referral to HIV services, and then referral and linkage to care were more likely to quickly engage with care and to stay in care.

“This study demonstrates that the time interval between a newly diagnosed adolescent’s HIV test and care referral and the time interval between care referral and first medical visit (linkage to care) have concrete implications for long-term HIV care engagement,” comment the investigators. “These data have quality of care implications for HIV testing programs in that the speed with which HIV-positive youth are referred for linkage has downstream implications for engagement.”

The HIV care continuum has several stages, specifically diagnosis, referral to specialist care, linkage to care, engagement with care, starting HIV therapy and viral suppression. In the US, adolescents – people aged between 12 and 24 years – have much poorer rates of engagement in HIV care compared to adults, and consequently, only 6% of all adolescents living with HIV have an undetectable viral load compared to approximately a third of adults.

Investigators wanted to see if longer time between HIV diagnosis and referral and linkage to care had subsequent implications for later engagement with care for newly diagnosed adolescents.

They therefore collected data from 15 Adolescent Medicine Trials Network Clinic sites in 13 cities across the US and Puerto Rico. Each of these sites implemented the SMILE programme in 2010, which was designed to boost adolescent engagement in the HIV care continuum. SMILE used intensive case management to identify newly diagnosed adolescents, assess individual barriers to linkage to care and achieve personalised referral to specialist care services.

For the purposes of the study, linkage to care was defined as an HIV-related medical appointment within six weeks of referral following diagnosis. Engagement in care was a second visit within 16 weeks of the initial visit.

The HIV care continuum has several stages, specifically diagnosis, referral to specialist care, linkage to care, engagement with care, starting HIV therapy and viral suppression. In the US, adolescents – people aged between 12 and 24 years – have much poorer rates of engagement in HIV care compared to adults, and consequently, only 6% of all adolescents living with HIV have an undetectable viral load compared to approximately a third of adults.

The research, suggested “that each newly diagnosed HIV-infected youth needs to be linked to care as quickly as possible to facilitate more rapid engagement in care, access to medications, and better long-term prognosis,” conclude the authors. “These data should be used to build evidence and help construct a seamless continuum of care for HIV-infected youth to help fulfill the goals outlined in the US National HIV/AIDS Strategy.” For more see this link please.




Effective HIV Programming In Any African Country Must Target Foreigners, Asylum Seekers, Refugees And Immigrants Too: Lessons From Botswana


There are lessons, African countries can draw from Botswana: immigrants or refugees to any country need to be targeted if HIV Programming were to be effective and successful.

In a study by Daniel J Escudero et al ( 2019), they found that Botswana has the highest level of HIV viral suppression globally, yet HIV incidence remains > 1% per year in adults aged 15 to 49. 

"Although causes of this continued elevated incidence have been postulated, a firm understanding remains elusive, especially in the presence of a highly successful HIV treatment programme in Botswana. 

Although Botswana provides free antiretroviral therapy (ART) for all citizens living with HIV through its national HIV programme, the first free national ART programme in sub‐Saharan Africa, non‐citizen immigrants (documented/undocumented) are currently ineligible for treatment within the national programme. Documented refugees living with HIV in camps do have free access to ART as long as they remain within the confines of the camp. Private HIV treatment is available, but remains prohibitively expensive for many non‐citizens. In addition to gaps in treatment coverage among men and young people, the lack of free treatment for non‐citizens may contribute to elevated HIV incidence in Botswana, as suggested by research in other settings. There is precedent for providing government‐sponsored HIV treatment to non‐citizens in Botswana. In 2014, a court ruling found that denying non‐citizens in prison access to ART violated their right to receive basic health services, as guaranteed by the Botswana Constitution. 

They concluded by asserting that “substantial research is needed to inform potential expansions in non‐citizen testing and treatment coverage. Data may be needed prior to significant policy changes since Botswana already self‐funds at least two‐thirds of its HIV response, and further strain on the country's programme capacity may be detrimental without increased donor input. This research should be nationally‐representative and address the extent of disease burden in the migrant population, and the population‐level benefits of viral suppression in vulnerable migrants. Policy decisions should also consider how to ensure undocumented non‐citizens may share in the benefit of treatment expansion. Preliminary review of these three important questions confirms that the HIV epidemic in this vulnerable population remains largely hidden, and its impact on the overall HIV epidemic in Botswana cannot be known without further study. Furthermore, the impact that expanded coverage may have on overall HIV incidence will require even further investigation into long‐term HIV treatment outcomes and antiretroviral resistance among immigrants, as well as patterns of sexual mixing between migrant and citizen communities.”
















Avoiding Forward Transmission And Ensuring Viral Load Suppression: Lessons From Zimbabwe


A study in Zimbabwe highlighted why there was high risk of death among adolescents while awaiting ART.
Reporting earlier for testing, taking up ART and ensuring ART-adherence are a sure way for suppressing viral load and ensuring longevity among those living with HIV. Mortality among HIV-positive adults awaiting antiretroviral therapy (ART) has previously been found to be high as reported by Shroufi et Al ( 2015). They compared adolescent pre-ART mortality to that of adults in a public sector HIV care programme in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe.

Methods: In this retrospective cohort study, we compared adolescent pre-ART outcomes with those of adults enrolled for HIV care in the same clinic. Adolescents were defined as those aged 10-19 at the time of registration. Comparisons of means and proportions were carried out using two-tailed sample t-tests and chi-square tests respectively, for normally distributed data, and the Mann-Whitney U-tests for non-normally distributed data. Loss to follow-up (LTFU) was defined as missing a scheduled appointment by three or more months.
Results: Between 2004 and 2010, 1382 of 1628 adolescents and 7557 of 11 106 adults who registered for HIV care met the eligibility criteria for ART. Adolescents registered at a more advanced disease stage than did adults (83% vs. 73% WHO stage III/IV, respectively, p and the median time to ART initiation was longer for adolescents than for adults [21 (10-55) days vs. 15 (7-42) days, pMortality among treatment-eligible adolescents awaiting ART was significantly higher than among adults (3% vs. 1.8%, respectively, p=0.004).
Conclusions: Adolescents present to ART services at a later clinical stage than adults and are at an increased risk of death prior to commencing ART. Improved and innovative HIV case-finding approaches and emphasis on prompt ART initiation in adolescents are urgently needed. Following registration, defaulter tracing should be used, whether or not ART has been commenced.
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