Abstract

The clinical monitoring of people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) contributes to identifying and managing cases of individuals who have not begun treatment (gap), those experiencing treatment failure or who have abandoned treatment. This article sought to present and discuss the development of a methodology to implement the clinical monitoring of PLWHA in the services of the Brazilian Unified National Health System (SUS). The methodology used since 2014 by the CRT-STI/AIDS-Coordination of the STI/AIDS Program, São Paulo State, Brazil, was re-structured in three meetings between June and August 2018. The new methodology retained the axes of presentation of number of users in treatment failure, gap or abandonment in the participant services, as well as the discussion of individual, social and programmatic vulnerabilities. A new axis was added which directs the discussion of the possibilities of reorganizing service care flows and management practices. Additionally, the intervention started to be carried out in health services, with the participation of a higher number of professionals from the multi-professional team, discussion of cases, workflows and processes, and regional meetings to exchange clinical monitoring experiences between services. The re-structuring of the methodology contributed to a reduction in treatment gap, a reorganization of care flows and the inclusion of clinical monitoring as a management tool in services specialized in providing care to PLWHA. This methodology can be implemented by other state programs, municipalities and services, since all have access to the same information sources used in this intervention.

Highlights

  • Since 2014, the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) proposed an ambitious goal to propel the world response toward the end of the AIDS epidemic, known as the [90-90-90] goal. This goal is supported by mathematical models that suggest that diagnosing 90% of individuals infected with HIV, treating 90% of diagnosed individuals and suppressing the viral load of 90% of individuals in treatment until 2020 will lead to the end of the AIDS epidemic by 2030 1

  • The concept of treatment as prevention, which underlies the [90-90-90] goal, is supported by the fact that people living with HIV and AIDS (PLWHA) who are in treatment and whose viral load is undetectable cannot transmit the virus

  • The axes that guided this first intervention were focused on the presentation and discussion were: (a) the incidence of, and mortality from, AIDS in the State of São Paulo and the regions that are the focus of the intervention; (b) the individual, programmatic and social vulnerabilities that impact the stages of care for PLWHA; and (c) the data found in each of the SIMC reports, correlated with the goals established by the state and national STI/AIDS Programs

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Summary

Introduction

Since 2014, the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) proposed an ambitious goal to propel the world response toward the end of the AIDS epidemic, known as the [90-90-90] goal. This goal is supported by mathematical models that suggest that diagnosing 90% of individuals infected with HIV, treating 90% of diagnosed individuals and suppressing the viral load of 90% of individuals in treatment until 2020 will lead to the end of the AIDS epidemic by 2030 1. The recognition of the importance of antiretroviral therapy (ART) for the prevention of transmission, reduction of morbimortality and improvement of PLWHA’s quality of life brings organizational and programmatic challenges of different kinds to public health services. The monitoring of the many stages of care for PLWHA and the development of intervention strategies to guarantee timely access and the maintenance of treatment adherence are at the heart of these challenges and are crucial to improving the Brazilian response to the epidemic 1

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