Literature DB >> 29112691

Reaching global HIV/AIDS goals: What got us here, won't get us there.

Wafaa M El-Sadr1, Katherine Harripersaud1, Miriam Rabkin1.   

Abstract

In a Perspective, Wafaa El-Sadr and colleagues discuss tailored approaches to treatment and prevention of HIV infection.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 29112691      PMCID: PMC5675304          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002421

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS Med        ISSN: 1549-1277            Impact factor:   11.069


Much accomplished, but much more needed

A decade ago, today’s progress towards confronting the global HIV epidemic would have been unimaginable. A remarkable global mobilization of resources through the United States President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and the Global Fund for AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, combined with the commitment of affected countries and communities, has enabled 19.5 million persons living with HIV (PLHIV) to access life-saving antiretroviral therapy (ART) [1]. This has resulted in decreasing HIV-related morbidity and mortality and contributed to a significant decline in the number of new infections [1]. Despite earlier concerns about the feasibility of scaling up HIV services in resource-limited settings, the majority of PLHIV accessing ART are in sub-Saharan Africa, where many countries have austere health systems characterized by scarce healthcare providers and weak laboratory, infrastructure, drug procurement, monitoring, and governance systems [2]. One of the critical enablers of this achievement was the adoption of the public health approach to HIV service delivery [2]. This strategy used simple evidence-based algorithms for HIV testing, prevention, and treatment; employed a single first-line antiretroviral regimen, standardized laboratory tests, and testing schedules; and involved streamlined data monitoring systems [3]. The simplicity and consistency of this approach enabled HIV services to be provided by nonphysician clinicians and facilitated the establishment of simplified laboratory and medication procurement systems, enabling the successful scale-up of treatment [3]. By facilitating the successful scale-up of HIV services, the public health approach is arguably “what got us here,” to a context in which more than half of all PLHIV are accessing treatment [1]. However, in order to reach ambitious global targets and achieve epidemic control, much more must be done—and swiftly. Not only must the number of PLHIV accessing ART increase substantially to reach 30 million people by 2020, but the quality of HIV services must be enhanced and effective primary prevention interventions must be brought to scale [1]. Challenges include reaching diverse patient populations, retaining them in either treatment or prevention programs, supporting adherence to ART and prevention methods, and addressing long wait times and health facility crowding, a problem for both recipients of care and health workers. In addition, concern over the plateauing of global resources highlights the vital importance of efficiency and cost-effectiveness as a possible way to address this enormous challenge [1].

Differentiated care for people living with HIV

Differentiated care may be an important step towards addressing health system and individual barriers to achieve HIV treatment goals [4]. Whereas earlier efforts, anchored in the public health approach, often distinguished only 2 groups of adult patients—pregnant and nonpregnant—differentiated care models tailor service frequency, service location, service intensity, and type of service provider for more categories of PLHIV [4]. The goal of differentiated care is to provide client-centered services that encourage engagement, adherence, and retention in care while also maximizing efficiency. The most urgent need has been to develop models of care for PLHIV who are stable on ART, generally defined by high adherence, evidence of favorable immunological response, and/or virological suppression [5]. By their sheer numbers, such patients represent the vast majority of visits to health facilities and contribute the most to provider workload, despite the fact that they do not require frequent clinical assessment. Moreover, requiring stable patients to repeatedly return to health facilities overlooks their needs and priorities and may itself be a barrier to retention in care and adherence to treatment. Differentiated care for stable patients includes group models, such as facility-based adherence clubs and community-based antiretroviral groups, as well as individual models, such as facility-based fast-track appointments, increased visit spacing, and community-based ART pickup [6]. These approaches recognize that successful treatment of a chronic disease, such as HIV, depends on patient self-management, often enhanced by the support provided by families and communities [6]. There is also high interest in developing differentiated care for other groups of PLHIV including pregnant women, PLHIV with advanced HIV disease, adolescents, men, migrant and mobile populations, and key populations, such as men who have sex with men, sex workers, and people who inject drugs. Although these groups bear a disproportionate burden of HIV infections, many face structural and psychosocial barriers, such as stigma, discrimination, and insensitive providers, that stand in the way of achieving optimal access to and engagement with care [7]. Other groups of PLHIV face difficulties in remaining in care due to competing priorities. For example, while the scale-up of ART for pregnant HIV-positive women has been impressive, their retention in care, particularly postpartum, remains suboptimal [8]. In a cohort study conducted in Cape Town, postpartum HIV-positive women were offered the option of following up via a differentiated service delivery model (community adherence clubs) or at their primary care clinic [8]. The majority preferred the adherence club model, with encouraging short-term outcomes.

Differentiated approaches to prevention

Achieving epidemic control is also critically dependent on HIV prevention. Primary prevention of HIV acquisition is required in addition to optimizing the potential of HIV treatment as a prevention tool [1]. Between 21% and 96% of new HIV infections occur among key populations and their sexual partners [9], and the enormous structural and societal barriers described above affect access to prevention services as well as treatment. Interventions to engage key populations have been shown to alleviate some of these impediments. For example, a study conducted in Kenya showed that the use of sex worker peer educators led to an increase in safer sexual behaviors and noted that individuals who participated in more peer education sessions achieved higher levels of protection [10]. Another study, also conducted in Kenya, demonstrated the feasibility of training health workers to better understand the needs of men who have sex with men [11]. Despite these successes, novel and effective strategies remain urgently needed to decrease HIV incidence amongst key and priority populations, and engaging members of these communities in designing and testing primary prevention initiatives is a priority.

The way forward

As the expression goes, “What got us here won’t get us there.” Attaining epidemic control will require continued rapid expansion of the number of PLHIV on treatment, engaging populations at risk for HIV infection, improvement of the quality of HIV services, and new approaches to program design and implementation (Fig 1). The scale-up of differentiated care has the potential to relieve crowded health facilities and overworked providers by moving stable patients on ART to more patient-centered models, enhancing both efficiency and quality. Differentiated care can also facilitate the engagement of other groups of PLHIV in models of service provision that meet their specific clinical and psychosocial needs. At the same time, innovations are urgently needed in the development of differentiated prevention delivery models that address the needs of specific groups at substantial risk for HIV infection. In addition, it is now more important than ever to utilize population-based, programmatic, and research data in shaping programs and prioritizing populations [12]. For instance, disaggregation of seemingly favorable national population HIV data by sex and age shows important gaps in the HIV care and HIV prevention continua for men and youth living with HIV.
Fig 1

Framework for achievement of HIV epidemic control.

It is important to note that creating a multitude of service delivery models, some overly complicated, risks undermining the public health approach that has been so vital to the success of HIV programs. Abandoning the public health approach by “overdifferentiating” may be as problematic as a one-size-fits-all approach [2]. Caution is required to avoid service models that disrupt the simple, streamlined approaches to health worker training, procurement, laboratory systems, and monitoring and evaluation strategies that were so central to successful HIV program expansion. As differentiated service delivery models are taken to scale, it will be critically important to evaluate their effects on individual and programmatic outcomes, client satisfaction, health provider productivity and satisfaction, and laboratory, procurement, and monitoring systems—as well as on the affordability and cost-effectiveness of specific models of care and prevention. Fundamentally, the essence of the public health approach is that it is anchored in the realities of resource-constrained health systems. Designing, implementing, and scaling up new service models that are person centered and informed by data and evidence will enable the achievement of high coverage, quality, and efficiency—paving the way towards epidemic control.
  9 in total

1.  Game changers: why did the scale-up of HIV treatment work despite weak health systems?

Authors:  Kevin M De Cock; Wafaa M El-Sadr; Tedros A Ghebreyesus
Journal:  J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr       Date:  2011-08       Impact factor: 3.731

2.  Population health and individualized care in the global AIDS response: synergy or conflict?

Authors:  Wafaa M El-Sadr; Miriam Rabkin; Kevin M DeCock
Journal:  AIDS       Date:  2016-09-10       Impact factor: 4.177

3.  Community-supported models of care for people on HIV treatment in sub-Saharan Africa.

Authors:  Marielle Bemelmans; Saar Baert; Eric Goemaere; Lynne Wilkinson; Martin Vandendyck; Gilles van Cutsem; Carlota Silva; Sharon Perry; Elisabeth Szumilin; Rodd Gerstenhaber; Lucien Kalenga; Marc Biot; Nathan Ford
Journal:  Trop Med Int Health       Date:  2014-05-28       Impact factor: 2.622

4.  Differentiated models of care for postpartum women on antiretroviral therapy in Cape Town, South Africa: a cohort study.

Authors:  Landon Myer; Victoria Iyun; Allison Zerbe; Tamsin K Phillips; Kirsty Brittain; Elton Mukonda; Joanna Allerton; Cathy D Kalombo; Andile Nofemela; Elaine J Abrams
Journal:  J Int AIDS Soc       Date:  2017-07-21       Impact factor: 5.396

5.  Stable patients and patients with advanced disease: consensus definitions to support sustained scale up of antiretroviral therapy.

Authors:  Greer Waldrop; Meg Doherty; Marco Vitoria; Nathan Ford
Journal:  Trop Med Int Health       Date:  2016-07-22       Impact factor: 2.622

6.  Impact of five years of peer-mediated interventions on sexual behavior and sexually transmitted infections among female sex workers in Mombasa, Kenya.

Authors:  Stanley Luchters; Matthew F Chersich; Agnes Rinyiru; Mary-Stella Barasa; Nzioki King'ola; Kishorchandra Mandaliya; Wilkister Bosire; Sam Wambugu; Peter Mwarogo; Marleen Temmerman
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2008-04-29       Impact factor: 3.295

7.  Men who have sex with men sensitivity training reduces homoprejudice and increases knowledge among Kenyan healthcare providers in coastal Kenya.

Authors:  Elise M van der Elst; Adrian D Smith; Evanson Gichuru; Elizabeth Wahome; Helgar Musyoki; Nicolas Muraguri; Greg Fegan; Zoe Duby; Linda-Gail Bekker; Bonnie Bender; Susan M Graham; Don Operario; Eduard J Sanders
Journal:  J Int AIDS Soc       Date:  2013-12-02       Impact factor: 5.396

8.  Reimagining HIV service delivery: the role of differentiated care from prevention to suppression.

Authors:  Anna Grimsrud; Helen Bygrave; Meg Doherty; Peter Ehrenkranz; Tom Ellman; Robert Ferris; Nathan Ford; Bactrin Killingo; Lynette Mabote; Tara Mansell; Annette Reinisch; Isaac Zulu; Linda-Gail Bekker
Journal:  J Int AIDS Soc       Date:  2016-12-01       Impact factor: 5.396

9.  A call for differentiated approaches to delivering HIV services to key populations.

Authors:  Virginia Macdonald; Annette Verster; Rachel Baggaley
Journal:  J Int AIDS Soc       Date:  2017-07-21       Impact factor: 5.396

  9 in total
  22 in total

Review 1.  High-quality health systems in the Sustainable Development Goals era: time for a revolution.

Authors:  Margaret E Kruk; Anna D Gage; Catherine Arsenault; Keely Jordan; Hannah H Leslie; Sanam Roder-DeWan; Olusoji Adeyi; Pierre Barker; Bernadette Daelmans; Svetlana V Doubova; Mike English; Ezequiel García-Elorrio; Frederico Guanais; Oye Gureje; Lisa R Hirschhorn; Lixin Jiang; Edward Kelley; Ephrem Tekle Lemango; Jerker Liljestrand; Address Malata; Tanya Marchant; Malebona Precious Matsoso; John G Meara; Manoj Mohanan; Youssoupha Ndiaye; Ole F Norheim; K Srinath Reddy; Alexander K Rowe; Joshua A Salomon; Gagan Thapa; Nana A Y Twum-Danso; Muhammad Pate
Journal:  Lancet Glob Health       Date:  2018-09-05       Impact factor: 26.763

Review 2.  Novel Longitudinal Methods for Assessing Retention in Care: a Synthetic Review.

Authors:  Aaloke Mody; Khai Hoan Tram; David V Glidden; Ingrid Eshun-Wilson; Kombatende Sikombe; Megha Mehrotra; Jake M Pry; Elvin H Geng
Journal:  Curr HIV/AIDS Rep       Date:  2021-05-04       Impact factor: 5.071

3.  Comprehensive Process Mapping and Qualitative Interviews to Inform Implementation of Rapid Linkage to HIV Care Programs in a Mid-Sized Urban Setting in the Southern United States.

Authors:  April C Pettit; Latrice C Pichon; Aima A Ahonkhai; Cedric Robinson; Bruce Randolph; Aditya Gaur; Andrea Stubbs; Nathan A Summers; Kimberly Truss; Meredith Brantley; Rose Devasia; Michelle Teti; Sarah Gimbel; Julia C Dombrowski
Journal:  J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr       Date:  2022-07-01       Impact factor: 3.771

4.  Co-creation of HIVST delivery approaches for improving urban men's engagement with HIV services in eThekwini District, KwaZulu-Natal: nominal group technique in intervention development.

Authors:  Tivani Mashamba-Thompson; Richard Lessells; Tafadzwa Dzinamarira; Paul Drain; Lehana Thabane
Journal:  Pilot Feasibility Stud       Date:  2022-06-09

5.  Integrated community-based HIV and non-communicable disease care within microfinance groups in Kenya: study protocol for the Harambee cluster randomised trial.

Authors:  Becky L Genberg; Juddy Wachira; Jon A Steingrimsson; Sonak Pastakia; Dan N Tina Tran; Jamil AbdulKadir Said; Paula Braitstein; Joseph W Hogan; Rajesh Vedanthan; Suzanne Goodrich; Catherine Kafu; Marta Wilson-Barthes; Omar Galárraga
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2021-05-18       Impact factor: 3.006

Review 6.  Closing the gaps in the HIV care continuum.

Authors:  Ruanne V Barnabas; Connie Celum
Journal:  PLoS Med       Date:  2017-11-21       Impact factor: 11.069

7.  Research priorities to inform "Treat All" policy implementation for people living with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa: a consensus statement from the International epidemiology Databases to Evaluate AIDS (IeDEA).

Authors:  Marcel Yotebieng; Ellen Brazier; Diane Addison; April D Kimmel; Morna Cornell; Olivia Keiser; Angela M Parcesepe; Amobi Onovo; Kathryn E Lancaster; Barbara Castelnuovo; Pamela M Murnane; Craig R Cohen; Rachel C Vreeman; Mary-Ann Davies; Stephany N Duda; Constantin T Yiannoutsos; Rose S Bono; Robert Agler; Charlotte Bernard; Jennifer L Syvertsen; Jean d'Amour Sinayobye; Radhika Wikramanayake; Annette H Sohn; Per M von Groote; Gilles Wandeler; Valeriane Leroy; Carolyn F Williams; Kara Wools-Kaloustian; Denis Nash
Journal:  J Int AIDS Soc       Date:  2019-01       Impact factor: 5.396

8.  To thine own test be true: HIV self-testing and the global reach for the undiagnosed.

Authors:  Vincent Wong; Erin Jenkins; Nathan Ford; Heather Ingold
Journal:  J Int AIDS Soc       Date:  2019-03       Impact factor: 5.396

9.  Can Changes in Service Delivery Models Improve Program Quality and Efficiency? A Closer Look at HIV Programs in Kenya and Uganda.

Authors:  Stephanie Kandasami; Hezekiah Shobiye; Ade Fakoya; Sarah Asiimwe; Maureen Inimah; Michael Etukoit; Linden Morrison; Michael Johnson; Mark Dybul
Journal:  J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr       Date:  2019-08-15       Impact factor: 3.731

10.  The end of HIV: Still a very long way to go, but progress continues.

Authors:  Steven G Deeks; Sharon R Lewin; Linda-Gail Bekker
Journal:  PLoS Med       Date:  2017-11-30       Impact factor: 11.069

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