Abstract

The 2013 WHO HIV guidelines provided effective antiretroviral regimens to reduce perinatal transmission to below 2%. The option-B approach of providing antiretroviral drugs was adopted by Nigeria, which contributed 32% of global gaps in Preventing Mother to child transmission (PMTCT). In Plateau State, which had 7.7% HIV prevalence, incessant ethnoreligious conflict created challenges impacting on HIV service delivery and access to treatment centers. PMTCT diagnostics conducted by the lead HIV implementing Partner (IP), revealed that several communities in Jos, Plateau State, lacked HIV treatment centers, but were also unable to access existing centers because of conflict related partitioning of Jos, calling for specialized strategies and collaboration to scale-up to affected communities. To bridge existing challenges related to distrust amongst communities, the intervention strategy identified six community oriented resource persons (CORPs), of same ethnoreligious dispensation as people in affected communities, who also possessed HIV programing competencies, to lead the intervention. The project methodology included engagement of community gatekeepers and Plateau HIV stakeholders, who generated context specific strategies to enter these communities and scale-up HIV/PMTCT. The lead CORPs included a female public health/HIV physician, another clinician who owned a community hospital, a HIV laboratory personnel, a HIV trained Data officer, a religious cleric/youth leader and a female expert patient cum member of Federation of Muslim women association of Nigeria (FOMWAN). Collaborating with various stakeholders, they birthed a community faith based organization they called Muslim Health Initiative of Nigeria (MUHIN). This served as platform for community engagement to scale-up HIV/PMTCT services. The Lead HIV Partner supported, engaged and funded MUHIN to provide context specific scale-up to address existing gaps. MUHIN identified, assessed, upgraded and activated twenty-eight community clinics for HIV/PMTCT service deliver, building on existing Maternal, child and New-born health (MNCH) structures. They provided HIV trainings, MNCH materials, national data-capture tools and capacity building to the identified facilities, staff and CORPs. They stratified according to facility capacity, and linked them using the Hub-and-spoke model, to provide HIV testing, PMTCT and Antiretroviral therapy (ART) services. In order to bridge existing human resource for health gaps existing at the clinics, community health workers and HIV positive women who had successfully completed PMTCT programs were engaged and trained according to task shifting and task sharing (TSTS) guidelines, in preparation for HIV/PMTCT activation using HCT as entry. We conclude that detailed diagnostics, planning and utilization of context-specific strategies including TSTS are critical for successful project outcomes.

Highlights

  • Data from UNAIDS indicate Nigeria still has the second largest global HIV epidemics and one of the highest rates of new infection in sub-Saharan Africa, and many HIV infected Nigerians are unaware of their status [1]

  • It indicates Nigeria still falls short of providing recommended numbers of HIV testing and counselling (HTC) sites, and poor access to antiretroviral treatment (ART) remains a challenge for people living with HIV (PLHIV), with consequent high AIDSrelated deaths

  • Employing evidence based approaches to identifying specific barriers, addressing them through existing community structures and closing these gaps becomes tenable. It was against this backdrop, that we identified fourteen major communities in Jos that lack HIV/prevention of mother to child transmission (PMTCT) services and conceptualized an engagement strategy with community oriented resource persons (CORPs) to improve coverage, uptake and retention of HIV/PMTCT services

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Summary

Introduction

Data from UNAIDS indicate Nigeria still has the second largest global HIV epidemics and one of the highest rates of new infection in sub-Saharan Africa, and many HIV infected Nigerians are unaware of their status [1]. Nigeria maintains position 122 out of 144 because of its ‘gender gap’ and unequal power balances between men and women [4] This means women have limited negotiating skills and may be unable to dictate their own sexual preferences, contraception use, children number and spacing, which all increase risks of contracting HIV and developing complications [5]. This is relevant in Nigeria, where patriarchy, religion and culture reinforce the low status of woman, and many women depend on men and require permission from male authority figures to access social, economic and health services [6]. An estimated 34.7% received HIV during antenatal care, and approximately 32% of pregnant HIV positive women received antiretroviral treatment for PMTCT [8], with consequent high rates (22%) of perinatal HIV transmission and low HIV early infant diagnosis (HEI) rates [7]

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