Abstract

Introduction: Safer conception care encompasses HIV care, treatment and prevention for persons living with HIV and their partners who desire children. In 2012, South Africa endorsed a progressive safer conception policy supporting HIV-affected persons to safely meet reproductive goals. However, aside from select research-supported clinics, widespread implementation has not occurred. Using South Africa as a case study, we identify key obstacles to policy implementation and offer recommendations to catalyse expansion of these services throughout South Africa and further afield.Discussion: Four key implementation barriers were identified by combining authors’ safer conception service delivery experiences with available literature. First, strategic implementation frameworks stipulating where, and by whom, safer conception services should be provided are needed. Integrating safer conception services into universal test-and-treat (UTT) and elimination-of-mother-to-child-transmission (eMTCT) priority programmes would support HIV testing, ART initiation and management, viral suppression and early antenatal/eMTCT care engagement goals, reducing horizontal and vertical transmissions. Embedding measurable safer conception targets into these priority programmes would ensure accountability for implementation progress. Second, facing an organizational clinic culture that often undermines clients’ reproductive rights, healthcare providers’ (HCP) positive experiences with eMTCT and enthusiasm for UTT provide opportunities to shift facility-level and individual attitudes in favour of safer conception provision. Third, safer conception guidelines have not been incorporated into HCP training. Combining safer conception with “test-and-treat” training would efficiently ensure that providers are better equipped to discuss clients’ reproductive goals and support safer conception practices. Lastly, HIV-affected couples remain largely unaware of safer conception strategies. HIV-affected populations need to be mobilized to engage with safer conception options alongside other HIV-related healthcare services.Conclusion: Key barriers to widespread safer conception service provision in South Africa include poor translation of policy into practical and measurable implementation plans, inadequate training and limited community engagement. South Africa should leverage the momentum and accountability associated with high priority UTT and eMTCT programmes to reinvigorate implementation efforts by incorporating safer conception into implementation and monitoring frameworks and associated HCP training and community engagement activities. South Africa’s experiences should be used to inform policy development and implementation processes in other HIV high-burden countries.

Highlights

  • Safer conception care encompasses HIV care, treatment and prevention for persons living with HIV and their partners who desire children

  • We propose that safer conception activities be incorporated into evolving universal test-and-treat (UTT) implementation plans and targets since this would represent an efficient alternative to a lengthy parallel process of developing a standalone safer conception framework

  • Integration of safer conception activities into the UTT plans finds congruence with 90:90:90 goals given the potential impact safer conception services may have on HIV counselling and testing (HCT) and antiretroviral therapy (ART) uptake, adherence and client retention, and viral suppression, amongst men [15,30,31]

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Summary

Introduction

Safer conception care encompasses HIV care, treatment and prevention for persons living with HIV and their partners who desire children. Conclusion: Key barriers to widespread safer conception service provision in South Africa include poor translation of policy into practical and measurable implementation plans, inadequate training and limited community engagement. The country’s Contraception and Fertility Planning Policy (2012) marked a paradigm shift from a contraception-focused family planning model, focused primarily on preventing unintended pregnancies, to one inclusive of safer conception services to support healthy, planned pregnancies [4] This shift occurred in response to South Africa’s high HIV-burden amongst women of reproductive age, increasing evidence of high fertility intentions and pregnancy rates in this group [5,6,7,8,9,10] and persistently high HIV acquisition rates around the time of pregnancy [11]. Services to prevent unintended pregnancies and support safe pregnancy are seen as key to reducing new HIV infections in young women and achieving elimination-of-mother-to-child-transmission (eMTCT) goals [4,12]

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