Julia Kenny1, Veronica Mulenga, Susan Hoskins, Francien Scholten, Diana M Gibb. 1. Clinical Trials Unit, Medical Research Council, and Department of Infectious Diseases and Microbiology, Institute of Child Health, University College London, 30 Guilford St., London, UK. jmk@ctu.mrc.ac.uk
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Success in diagnosing and treating HIV-infected adults has, where HIV care and treatment is available, turned HIV into a chronic, rather than life-limiting disease. Progress meeting the needs of HIV-infected children, perinatally and horizontally infected adolescents, pregnant women and older people has lagged behind. We review the special needs and barriers to scaling up care and antiretroviral therapy (ART) coverage in these populations. DESIGN AND METHODS: A literature review combined with personal views and operational experience specifically from countries covered by the Evidence for Action programme. RESULTS: Challenges include logistics of diagnosis and treatment in pregnancy, difficulties in early infant diagnosis, availability of appropriate paediatric formulations, management of adolescents, and comorbidities in older people. CONCLUSION: Priorities for development need to focus upon the simplification of HIV care to allow provision for all ages at the primary healthcare level. Specific priorities include focused use of virological testing in infants, ongoing development of dispersible and scored fixed-dose ART combinations suitable for use across ages, development of 'adolescent-friendly' HIV services catering for perinatally and horizontally infected adolescents to improve adherence and reduce onward transmissions, simplification of referral pathways to ensure all pregnant women are tested for HIV and commenced on ART, and education of healthcare workers on the specific needs of HIV care in older patients. Each priority will be reviewed and potential solutions discussed.
OBJECTIVE: Success in diagnosing and treating HIV-infected adults has, where HIV care and treatment is available, turned HIV into a chronic, rather than life-limiting disease. Progress meeting the needs of HIV-infectedchildren, perinatally and horizontally infected adolescents, pregnant women and older people has lagged behind. We review the special needs and barriers to scaling up care and antiretroviral therapy (ART) coverage in these populations. DESIGN AND METHODS: A literature review combined with personal views and operational experience specifically from countries covered by the Evidence for Action programme. RESULTS: Challenges include logistics of diagnosis and treatment in pregnancy, difficulties in early infant diagnosis, availability of appropriate paediatric formulations, management of adolescents, and comorbidities in older people. CONCLUSION: Priorities for development need to focus upon the simplification of HIV care to allow provision for all ages at the primary healthcare level. Specific priorities include focused use of virological testing in infants, ongoing development of dispersible and scored fixed-dose ART combinations suitable for use across ages, development of 'adolescent-friendly' HIV services catering for perinatally and horizontally infected adolescents to improve adherence and reduce onward transmissions, simplification of referral pathways to ensure all pregnant women are tested for HIV and commenced on ART, and education of healthcare workers on the specific needs of HIV care in older patients. Each priority will be reviewed and potential solutions discussed.
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