| Literature DB >> 23078621 |
Mao Tan Eang1, Mean Chhi Vun, Khun Kim Eam, Samreth Sovannarith, Seng Sopheap, Ngauv Bora, Rajendra Yadav, Masami Fujita, Bernard Tomas, Massimo Ghidinelli, Pieter van Maaren, William A Wells.
Abstract
Tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS have synergistic health impacts in terms of disease development and progression. Therefore, collaborative TB and HIV/AIDS activities are a logical health systems response. However, the establishment of these activities presents a challenge for countries that have strong vertical disease programs that differ in their implementation philosophies. Here, we review the process by which TB/HIV collaboration was established in Cambodia. A cycle of overlapping and mutually reinforcing initiatives - local research; piloted implementation with multiple options; and several rounds of policy formulation guided by a cross-functional Technical Working Group - was used to drive nationwide introduction of a full set of TB/HIV collaborative activities. Senior Ministry of Health officials and partner organizations brought early attention to TB/HIV. Both national programs implemented initial screening and testing interventions, even in the absence of a detailed, overarching framework. The use of multiple options for HIV testing identified which programmatic options worked best, and early implementation and pilots determined what unanswered questions required further research. Local conduct of this research - on co-treatment timing and TB symptom screening - speeded adoption of the results into policy guidance, and clarified the relative roles of the two programs. Roll-out is continuing, and results for a variety of key indicators, including screening PLHIV for TB, and testing TB patients for HIV, are at 70-80% and climbing. This experience in Cambodia illustrates the influence of health research on policy, and demonstrates that clear policy guidance, the pursuit of incremental advances, and the use of different approaches to generate evidence can overcome structural barriers to change and bring direct benefits to patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23078621 PMCID: PMC3522048 DOI: 10.1186/1478-4505-10-34
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Res Policy Syst ISSN: 1478-4505
Timeline of TB/HIV activities in Cambodia*
| 1993 | I | CENAT | DOTS expansion initiated | Availability of TB treatment increased | Post-conflict environment |
| 1999 | P | MoH | TB/HIV subcommittee formed | Dialogue initiated | Irregular meetings; limited action |
| 2002 | P | CENAT and NCHADS | Framework for TB/HIV | First formal agreement | Agreement remained general; technical direction still unclear |
| 2003 | I | NCHADS | ART initiated under Continuum of Care; OI/ART team included TB physician | Availability of ART increased | Initially low capacity of healthcare system |
| 2003 | R | NCHADS, CENAT, WHO, FHI, US CDC, JICA | TB/HIV pilot programs | Pilots initiated and results published; operational challenges highlighted | Commitment to national roll-out not present prior to pilots, and relative roles of CENAT and NCHADS were not yet defined |
| 2006 | P | CENAT and NCHADS | SoP on HIV testing of TB patients and TB screening of PLHIV | Relative roles of CENAT and NCHADS defined; OI/ART teams screened PLHIV for TB and CENAT used 3 options to increase screening of TB patients for HIV | Technical questions remained, i.e., research was needed to define best practices for ART initiation and TB symptom screening prior to IPT |
| 2009 | R | CENAT, NCHADS, US CDC, Cambodian Health Committee and research partners | CAMELIA and ID-TB/HIV studies completed and results disseminated in Cambodia | Results define when ART should be started in TB patients and what symptom screen to use in PLHIV prior to IPT | Very few challenges; rapid adoption of findings into field practice |
| 2010 | P | TWG for TB/HIV, NCHADS with CENAT | 3Is SOP completed | Roll-out of 3Is, based on detailed roles and responsibilities | TB screening of existing PLHIV may put burden on TB diagnostic services |
| 2010 | P | CENAT, NCHADS | Revised TB/HIV framework | All TB/HIV policy captured in a single document |
*Abbreviations not defined in main text: MoH (Ministry of Health); FHI (Family Health International); US CDC (US Centers for Disease Control); JICA (Japan International Cooperation Agency); TWG (Technical Working Group).
^Types of activities are research (R), policy (P), and implementation (I).