| Literature DB >> 28046045 |
Edward Adekola Oladele1, Hadiza Khamofu1, Seun Asala1, Mariya Saleh1, Uche Ralph-Opara1, Charles Nwosisi1, Chukwuma Anyaike2, Catherine Gana1, Oluwasanmi Adedokun1, Rebecca Dirks3, Olufunsho Adebayo1, Modupe Oduwole4, Justin Mandala3, Kwasi Torpey1,5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: As the world is making progress towards elimination of mother-to-child transmission of HIV, poor coverage of PMTCT services in Nigeria remains a major challenge. In order to address this, scale-up was planned with activities organized into 3 phases. This paper describes the process undertaken in eight high burden Nigerian states to rapidly close PMTCT coverage gaps at facility and population levels between February 2013 and March 2014.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28046045 PMCID: PMC5207649 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0169342
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Facilities that were assessed.
Rank order prioritization of LGAs for PMTCT expansion–example from Abia state.
| LGAs | MTCT Burden | PMTCT Service Coverage Gap | Rank sum [Rank 1 +Rank 2] | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Estimated number of HIV+ pregnant women | Rank 1 (maternal HIV burden) | Number of sites with ANC services | Proportion without PMTCT services | Rank 2 (PMTCT service gap) | ||
| Umuahia South | 995 | 15 | 37 | 100% | 17 | 32 |
| Ikwuano | 600 | 8 | 39 | 100% | 17 | 25 |
| Obingwa | 792 | 12 | 51 | 98% | 12 | 24 |
| Aba South | 1785 | 17 | 64 | 88% | 6 | 23 |
| Arochukwu | 737 | 11 | 49 | 98% | 12 | 23 |
| Osisioma | 961 | 14 | 65 | 97% | 9 | 23 |
| Umuahia North | 1597 | 16 | 64 | 89% | 7 | 23 |
| Bende | 839 | 13 | 62 | 95% | 8 | 21 |
| Ugwunagbo | 372 | 3 | 52 | 100% | 17 | 20 |
| Ukwa East | 253 | 2 | 20 | 100% | 17 | 19 |
| Isiala Ngwa South | 595 | 7 | 39 | 97% | 9 | 16 |
| Aba North | 446 | 5 | 60 | 97% | 9 | 14 |
| Nneochi | 710 | 10 | 37 | 84% | 3 | 13 |
| Ohafia | 690 | 9 | 44 | 82% | 2 | 11 |
| Isuikwuato | 504 | 6 | 44 | 84% | 3 | 9 |
| Isiala Ngwa North | 119 | 1 | 44 | 86% | 5 | 6 |
| Ukwa West | 380 | 4 | 19 | 68% | 1 | 5 |
| Total | 12,377 | 790 | 93% | |||
Fig 2Typical timeline for activities within a single state.
Fig 3Ownership of assessed health facilities.
Fig 4State-by-state breakdown of sites meeting HR requirements.
Availability of services and infrastructure for PMTCT scale-up.
| Infrastructure and service readiness | Facilities assessed | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Public | Private | Total | |
| 2297 | 1879 | 4176 | |
| Dispensing haematenics and IPTPs | 88% | 76% | 83% |
| Antenatal care space | 85% | 74% | 80% |
| Provides maternity services | 71% | 78% | 74% |
| Provides child follow-up services | 82% | 64% | 74% |
| Has space for labour and delivery | 64% | 78% | 70% |
| Provides family planning services | 70% | 61% | 66% |
| Has a pharmacy store/dispensary | 58% | 65% | 61% |
| Available laboratory services | 55% | 67% | 60% |
| Has a medical records system | 46% | 61% | 53% |
| Has designated space for laboratory | 46% | 59% | 52% |
| Has space for confidential counselling | 61% | 38% | 51% |
Fig 5Smart expansion—sites with greater ANC attendance were prioritized for early phases of the scale up.
Increase in facility PMTCT coverage from 8% to 50% in eight states.
| State | No of facilities with ANC | Number of facilities with PMTCT (ARVs) at R-HFA | % facility coverage prior to scale up | Facilities activated as at March 2014 | Global Fund scale-up | Total number of facilities providing PMTCT services as at Mar 2014 | % facility coverage as of March 14 (facilities providing PMTCT as a proportion of facilities with ANC) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 790 | 46 | 6% | 386 | 12 | 444 | 56% | |
| 409 | 34 | 8% | 301 | 12 | 347 | 85% | |
| 1153 | 51 | 4% | 293 | 12 | 356 | 31% | |
| 167 | 38 | 23% | 86 | 12 | 136 | 81% | |
| 932 | 134 | 14% | 380 | 12 | 526 | 56% | |
| 273 | 34 | 12% | 233 | 0 | 267 | 98% | |
| 934 | 10 | 1% | 120 | 12 | 142 | 15% | |
| 413 | 65 | 16% | 245 | 12 | 322 | 78% | |
| 5052 | 412 | 8% | 2044 | 84 | 2540 | 50% |
* Data for Lagos and Kano States are from the 10 of 20 and 22 of 44 LGAs supported by SIDHAS respectively
Increased population level access to PMTCT.
| Testing in PMTCT | ARVs for PMTCT | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oct-12 to Sep-13 | Oct-13 to Sep-14 | Change | Oct-12 to Sep-13 | Oct-13 to Sep-14 | Change | |||||
| Estimated no. of pregnant women | Pregnant women counselled, tested and received results (CTRR) | Estimated no. of pregnant women | Pregnant Women CTRR | Percentage increase in number of pregnant women tested | Estimated number of HIV+ pregnant women | HIV+ Pregnant Women receiving ARVs for PMTCT | Estimated number of HIV+ pregnant women | HIV+ Pregnant Women receiving ARVs for PMTCT | Percentage increase in number of HIV+ pregnant women receiving ARVs | |
| Abia | 173,031 | 17,859 | 177,766 | 82,185 | 360% | 12,631 | 722 | 12,977 | 1,663 | 130% |
| Akwa Ibom | 249,641 | 25,431 | 258,275 | 144,373 | 468% | 27,211 | 1,276 | 28,152 | 4,248 | 233% |
| Anambra | 252,261 | 57,080 | 257,836 | 163,788 | 187% | 21,947 | 1,315 | 22,432 | 2,548 | 94% |
| Bayelsa | 105,144 | 46,812 | 108,215 | 73,075 | 56% | 9,568 | 449 | 9,848 | 585 | 30% |
| CRS | 177,777 | 37,935 | 182,791 | 155,354 | 310% | 12,622 | 1,051 | 12,978 | 3,080 | 193% |
| Kano | 579,121 | 84,232 | 617,155 | 270,990 | 222% | 19,690 | 517 | 20,983 | 1,031 | 99% |
| Lagos | 1,094,152 | 38,627 | 1,129,165 | 122,662 | 218% | 55,802 | 1,079 | 57,587 | 1,565 | 45% |
| Rivers | 332,442 | 24,908 | 343,779 | 139,596 | 460% | 19,947 | 527 | 20,627 | 2,734 | 419% |
| Total | 2,963,569 | 332,884 | 3,074,982 | 1,152,023 | 246% | 179,417 | 6,936 | 185,584 | 17,454 | 152% |