Title: Integrating HIV prevention, care and treatment in subSaharan Africa
1Integrating HIV prevention, care and treatment in
sub-Saharan Africa
Satellite Session August 6, 2008XVII Annual
International AIDS Conference
The testing and scaling up of intervention models
involving women and youth
2Overview
- HIV Prevalence in sub-Saharan Africa
- Treatment Coverage
- The Situation for Women and Youth
- Integrating Prevention, Care and Treatment
3HIV Prevalence in sub-Saharan Africa
- 23 million people living with HIV
- 60 of all infections globally
- More than half (57) are female 10 are children
- 2 million new infections per year
- Southern and East Africa are hardest hit
- Zimbabwe 16
- South Africa 19
- Tanzania 7
4Treatment Coverage and Access
- Treatment coverage increased from 2 in 2003 to
23 in 2006 region-wide - However, coverage varies widely between countries
and populations - 70 coverage in Rwanda
- lt20 in Zimbabwe and Tanzania
- South Africa wealthiest country in SSA with only
28 coverage - Barriers include poor health care
infrastructure inadequate supply distribution
issues lack of trained care providers
5Women and Youth
- Women under age 25 are 2-3 times more likely than
males to be HIV infected - Fueled by poverty and gender inequities
- Treatment coverage is not systematically biased
against women, but is severely constrained in
marginalized populations (e.g. sex workers, IDUs)
- Coverage for PMTC is only 5
- Only 60,000 -100,000 of 800,000 children in need
are on treatment
6Integrating Prevention, Care and Treatment
- Efficient use of resources cost-effective
- Facilitates the use of treatment funds for care
and prevention - Integrative approach reduces stigma services are
provided regardless of sero-status - Comprehensive approach to prevention reducing
risk of acquisition among uninfected, as well as
secondary transmission among positives
7Integrating Prevention, Care and Treatment
- Novel strategies to improve and integrate
prevention, care and treatment - SHAZ! (Shaping the Health of Adolescents in
Zimbabwe) - Womens Co-Op South Africa
- The Youth Health Corps for Community-based
Prevention, Care and Treatment - From research into practice scaling up of
effective programs
8Integrating HIV prevention, care and treatment in
sub-Saharan Africa
Satellite Session August 6, 2008XVII Annual
International AIDS Conference
The testing and scaling up of intervention models
involving women and youth