In 2018, Yvonne Zitha learned that she had HIV. “I got it when I was young. I was scared because my friends died from HIV,” she says. Zitha, who lives with her sister in a rural areas in Mpumalanga, South Africa, was going to a nearby health facility to collect her antiretroviral treatment, but she wasn’t taking it regularly, she hid it from others and the long queues in the center overwhelmed her. 

Zitha found hope in the nurse at the clinic - Sibongile Mondlane, who provided counseling to her. Eventually, Zitha realized that she had to commit to taking  her medication. However, collecting her medicine remained a challenge. “I used to fetch it from the nurse. But I had to wait for many hours. My immune system was improving, so I wanted to adhere, but the queues were too long,” she says. 

Because Zitha was getting stronger, a nurse suggested she use the Collect & Go smart locker option for her medicine collection. Smart lockers safely store a patient’s medicine until it is convenient for them to collect it. Once the patient receives a one-time pin on their mobile, they know it’s time for their next collection. “I was shown how to use Collect & Go - it was so easy. I am so happy as I get my medicine whenever I want,” says Zitha, whose viral load is now in control.

Nurse Mondlane adds, “Collect & Go reduces work for healthcare workers by reducing the queues in a facility while making medicine collection quick for patients. We promote adherence, so quick medicine collection is very important.”  

Right to Care district pharmacist, Kgadi Moremi, explains that, “It is not only convenient for users but also takes significant pressure off healthcare workers. Chronic patients who are stable on their treatment can easily and quickly access their medicine.” This includes HIV medicine as well as medicines for diabetes, hypertension, asthma, and other chronic conditions. 

Collect & Go smart lockers were developed by Right to Care’s innovation subsidiary, Right ePharmacy, to support medicine collection solutions in South Africa. 

The health facility is supported by health non-profit NGO, Right to Care, with funding from PEPFAR through the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), to help it achieve UNAIDS 95-95-95 targets. It serves over 3,200 HIV-positive patients, with 2,800 of these now using Collect & Go, which is also supported by USAID. 92 percent of the patients on anti-retrovirals at the center are now virally suppressed. 

"Right to Care is a U.S. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR)-funded, USAID implementing partner under the Accelerating Program Achievements to Control the Epidemic (APACE) grant in South Africa."

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Dispensing medicines to patients
Nurse, Sibongile Mondlane, counseled Yvonne until she made the decision to stay on her treatment. Yvonne’s viral load is now undetectable.
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Southern Africa Regional Stories South Africa Stories