| Literature DB >> 24950749 |
Mean Chhi Vun1, Masami Fujita2, Tung Rathavy3, Mao Tang Eang4, Seng Sopheap1, Samreth Sovannarith1, Chhea Chhorvann1, Ly Vanthy5, Oum Sopheap6, Emily Welle7, Laurent Ferradini8, Chin Sedtha9, Sok Bunna10, Robert Verbruggen11.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: In the mid-1990s, Cambodia faced one of the fastest growing HIV epidemics in Asia. For its achievement in reversing this trend, and achieving universal access to HIV treatment, the country received a United Nations millennium development goal award in 2010. This article reviews Cambodia's response to HIV over the past two decades and discusses its current efforts towards elimination of new HIV infections.Entities:
Keywords: HIV; epidemic; integration; response; service linkage; universal access
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24950749 PMCID: PMC4065309 DOI: 10.7448/IAS.17.1.18905
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int AIDS Soc ISSN: 1758-2652 Impact factor: 5.396
Figure 1Trend of the epidemic. Estimated and projected numbers of PLHIV, new HIV infections and modes of HIV transmission in Cambodia [6].
The three phases of the health sector response to HIV: key features and milestones
| Phase I (1991–2000) | Phase II (2001–2011) | Phase III (2012–2020) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| HIV epidemic |
Adult prevalence peaked at 1.7% in 1998 Most new infections from brothel sex work |
Adult prevalence declined to 0.8% in 2011 Sex work shifted to entertainment establishments MSM/TG/PWID emerged |
1350 new infections in 2012 - 50% partners and casual - 40% key populations - 10% MTCT |
| HIV prevention for key populations |
100% condom use for brothel-based sex workers IEC for general population |
Peer outreach to entertainment workers and other emerging key populations, with referral to health services |
Sharpening response to key populations at higher risk |
| Testing and counselling | VCCT in main cities |
Nationwide expansion of VCCT in all operational districts and 20% of health centres PITC in most health centres |
Finger-prick HIV testing and counselling in all health centres and outreach settings Testing of partners of PLHIV and key populations |
| Care and treatment including PMTCT |
Extensive home-based care PLHIV peer support groups and network emerged |
ART scale-up Expanding PMTCT and TB/HIV |
Maximizing retention throughout cascades including partner testing and TB/HIV Test and treat Elimination of MTCT |
| Strategic information |
Sentinel surveillance |
Electronic database for each service Continuous quality improvement |
Client tracking across services Monitoring impact HIV drug resistance |
| Orientation of programme management | Vertical | Linkage | Integration |
IEC=information, education, communication; MTCT=mother-to-child transmission; MSM=men who have sex with men; PITC=provider-initiated testing and counselling; PMTCT=prevention of mother-to-child transmission; PWID=people who inject drugs; VCCT=voluntary confidential counselling and testing; TG=transgender.
Figure 2HIV, condom use and STI. Trends among brothel-based sex workers, Phnom Penh.
Expansion of services and coverage throughout Phase II
| 2001 | 2003 | 2005 | 2007 | 2009 | 2011 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Estimated no. of PLHIV | 107,371 | 103,423 | 96,550 | 90,176 | 85,885 | 83,413 |
| No. of health centres (HC) | (850) | n.a. | n.a. | 957 | 967 | 1004 |
| VCCT sites | 25 | 51 | 109 | 197 | 233 | 255 |
| ART – no. of operational districts with ART sites | 1 | 4 | 32 | 49 | 52 | 55 |
| No. of PLHIV receiving ART | 71 | 2230 | 12,355 | 26,664 | 37,315 | 46,481 |
| Estimated no. of PLHIV needing ART | 31,537 | 38,644 | 42,039 | 44,348 | 47,576 | 58,216 |
| % PLHIV receiving ART/estimated no. of PLHIV needing ART | 0.2% | 5.8% | 29% | 60% | 78% | 80% |
| Home-based care (HBC) – no. of HBC teams | 52 | n.a. | 261 | 253 | 328 | 354 |
| No. of HC with HBC team | n.a. | n.a. | 366 | 683 | 742 | 841 |
| No. of operational districts with HBC teams | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | 67 | 72 |
| PMTCT – no. of HC offering HIV testing to pregnant women | 0 | 7 | 25 | 91 | 228 | 944 |
| No. of pregnant women tested for HIV | n.a. | 18,553 | 46,468 | 95,277 | 144,236 | 314,953 |
| % Pregnant women tested for HIV/estimated pregnant women | n.a. | 5.8% | 14.2% | 28.2% | 44.0% | 86.0% |
| No. of HIV+ pregnant women receiving ARV | n.a. | 87 | 175 | 599 | 798 | 1014 |
| % HIV+ pregnant women receiving ARV | n.a. | 3.5% | 9.0% | 11.2% | 32.3% | 69.2% |
| TB/HIV – no. of operational districts offering HIV testing to TB cases | n.a. | 9 | 15 | 52 | 74 | 77 |
| % PLHIV screened for TB upon pre-ART enrolment | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | 34.5% | 85.0% |
| No. of TB cases tested for HIV | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | 17,105 | 28,246 | 32,544 |
| % TB cases tested for HIV/TB cases | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | 4.7% | 70.3% | 82.0% |
| No. of HIV+ TB cases receiving ART | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | 610 | 526 | 1083 |
| % HIV+ TB cases receiving ART/HIV-positive TB cases | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | 11.0% | 14.6% | 79.2% |
Reporting of the number of health centres was established in 2007. The figure for 2001 is an estimate;
ART eligibility criteria for adults changed in 2010 from CD4 count 200 to 350; ^ARV for PMTCT includes single dose nevirapine.
ARV for PMTCT includes single dose nevirapine.
Figure 3Continuum of Care for PLHIV (2011 Framework). Continuum of Care refers to a network of resources and services across homes, the community and health facilities that provide long-term comprehensive support for those in need.
Figure 4Linked Response demonstration sites in Kirivong operational district, 2008. Left, before Linked Response was introduced, pregnant women seen at 20 health centres (HC) had to travel to only two VCCT sites and one OI/ART service. Right, Linked Response introduced five new VCCT sites at the health centre level and a blood sample referral system to reduce the number of in-person referrals, travel distances and delays.
Figure 5Impact of Linked Response. Percentage of pregnant women attending ANC tested for HIV/syphilis, out of total number of expected pregnant women. Testing coverage spiked in five operational districts.
Figure 6Cambodia 3.0. A plan for the elimination of virtually all new HIV infections by 2020.