USAID's Activities: Care and Treatment of HIV/AIDS
The U.S. Agency for International
Development is committed to improving the quality of life
of HIV-infected individuals. USAID supports both prevention
and care interventions to reduce the impact of the HIV/AIDS
epidemic on individuals, families, communities, and nations.
USAID collaborates closely with host country governments,
citizens groups and other donors toward the goal of helping
local institutions provide care and psychosocial support
services to at least 25 percent of HIV-infected persons by
2008. USAID will be a key partner in President Bush’s
Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, which aims to provide antiretroviral
drugs to 2 million HIV-infected people and provide care services
for 10 million HIV-infected individuals and children affected
by HIV/AIDS.
The Role of Care and Treatment
HIV/AIDS is an enduring epidemic that
must be fought with both prevention and care. The virus most
often strikes those whose lives are already beset by poverty
and hardship in countries where governments cannot afford
to provide treatment or life-prolonging medication. USAID
has long recognized that providing care and support can reduce
the impact of the HIV/AIDS pandemic on individuals and societies
and enhance prevention efforts. Availability of care increases
demand for voluntary counseling and testing services, reinforces
prevention messages, provides hope to those who are infected,
helps destigmatize the disease, and stabilizes AIDS-affected
families and communities.
USAID's Response
Introducing antiretroviral
drugs.
In 2003, USAID’s care and treatment activities
expanded to include the introduction of life-saving antiretroviral
drug therapies in developing countries. Significant declines
in the price of these drugs have enabled USAID and its
partners to integrate antiretroviral treatment and management
into relevant prevention and care programs. In its three
introductory sites, USAID is creating models for antiretroviral
treatment that governments and the private sector can
expand to a national level. By the end of 2003, approximately
500 patients will receive treatment in the three countries.
- Ghana: In Ghana, the "Start" program
is a comprehensive prevention, care and treatment
program that is designed to define, refine and document
approaches
to HIV/AIDS service delivery in resource-poor settings. "Start" will
begin in two districts in the Eastern Region of Ghana,
where an estimated 18,000 people out of 240,000 are
HIV positive. The government of Ghana will utilize
funds from
the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and
Malaria to expand the number of people treated at
the three USAID
supported sites. This will be the first example of
USAID programs leveraging Global Fund resources for
AIDS treatment.
USAID assistance in developing the skills and infrastructure
necessary to provide these treatment services will
help ensure that the Global Fund resources achieve
maximum impact.
- Kenya: On May 23, 2003, USAID started ARV treatment
in Mombassa, Kenya, at the Coast Provincial General
Hospital, and at two primary health care centers that have ongoing
voluntary HIV counseling and testing services.
- Rwanda: On February 27, 2003 four HIV-positive patients
at the Biryogo Medical and Social Center became the first
to receive antiretroviral therapy under a new USAID-supported
effort. These first four patients are women; three are
widows caring for their own children as well as orphans
from the 1994 war and genocide. None of them is able
to work because of HIV-related illnesses. The fourth
woman
is a 20-year-old unmarried student who aspires to be
a laboratory technician and continue her education at
the
university level. The treatment program will build on
existing HIV counseling and testing services, and expand
the range
of medical care and support services that are available
to HIV-infected individuals. In this site, a major focus
will be on supporting community responses to provide
home-based care as a complement to clinic-based services.
A second
site will begin treatment later in the year.
- The Costs of Antiretroviral Treatment in Zambia [PDF, 176KB]
Working with faith- and community-based
organizations. While people of faith around the world hold differing views
on how best to prevent HIV infection, all belief systems
have compassionate care for the sick as a core value. As
USAID expands its work in care and support for people living
with HIV and AIDS, community
and faith-based organizations will be essential partners in providing voluntary HIV counseling
and testing, home care, clinical services, and advanced
treatments. A USAID initiative, Communities Organized in
Response to the HIV/AIDS Epidemic (CORE), strives to get
resources and technical assistance to faith-based and community-based
organizations, which are often best suited to provide care
and support.
Home-based care. Home-based care allows AIDS patients to
remain in the community, fostering better understanding
of HIV/AIDS within families and the community and permitting
questions and misunderstandings about prevention and care
to be addressed as they arise. Home-based care for people
living with HIV/AIDS is particularly important in developing
countries where there is a severe shortage of hospital
beds, inability to afford prophylactic drug therapies,
and poor nutrition. In Cambodia, a USAID-supported organization
sends home care teams to provide palliative care, counseling,
education, and welfare support to patients and family members
in the 16 provinces hardest hit by the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Treating
TB and other opportunistic infections. Almost
one-third of people living with HIV have tuberculosis,
and it is the leading cause of death in AIDS patients.
Prevention and treatment of active tuberculosis is one
of the most important interventions for increasing the
length and quality of life of those infected with HIV.
USAID is making significant investments in building the
essential health care infrastructure to provide care and
treatment of tuberculosis and other opportunistic infections.
USAID is expanding implementation of the highly effective
Directly Observed Treatment, Short Course (DOTS) strategy
for treating tuberculosis and is investing in research
to develop rapid, low-cost diagnostics, cost-effective
new drugs, and improved approaches to implementing DOTS.
Support to children affected
by HIV/AIDS. USAID is currently
funding more than 77 activities in 24 countries to support
children affected
by HIV/AIDS. Many of these activities
focus on strengthening the abilities of families and communities
to provide care and support, and linking them with government
social services; helping children and adolescents obtain
an education; helping a family preserve their livelihood;
and supporting policy development and research. USAID supports
community- and faith-based organizations that have been
the leaders in helping these children. In Romania, USAID-supported
activities have included training of health care providers
in pediatric AIDS care, creation of an outpatient care
and treatment facility for HIV-positive children, social
services and case management for families with HIV-positive
children, and strengthening the ability of government and
local organizations to effectively respond to the issues
of children affected by HIV/AIDS.
Providing adequate nutrition. A USAID study found that,
compared with an average adult, a person with HIV requires
10 to 15 percent more energy a day, and 50 to 100 percent
more protein a day. USAID is now incorporating food security
activities into care and support efforts. Since 2000, USAID
has provided $10 million per year in food aid to children
and families affected by HIV/AIDS.
Psychosocial and palliative care. Psychosocial support
can help infected individuals and their families cope with
a life-threatening disease and alleviate the economic loss
and social stigma that often accompany HIV/AIDS. In addition,
palliative care for HIV/AIDS symptoms can ease the physical
discomfort caused by the disease. In Uganda, USAID supports
The AIDS Support Organization in implementing activities
such as succession planning, in which children and their
HIV-positive parents are assisted in discussing HIV status
and future plans; training for teachers, parents, and other
caregivers in counseling skills; workshops for foster parents
on key issues in caring for orphans; and support visits
to schools and families.
Microfinance. The HIV/AIDS pandemic presents enormous
economic challenges to households and communities. People
living with HIV/AIDS may suffer discrimination from financial
institutions and traditional credit schemes. To mitigate
the economic effects of HIV/AIDS on low-income populations,
USAID implements microfinance activities that give vulnerable
households access to credit and enable them to generate
income. In Zambia, USAID has provided training and grants
to organizations to manage community-based revolving loans.
The loans are given to individual vulnerable households
to boost their income-generating activities so that they
can meet the needs of children under their care.
May 2003 Back
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