Need for Timely Paediatric HIV Treatment within Primary Health Care in Rural South Africa
2009
BACKGROUND: In areas where adult HIV prevalence has reached hyperendemic levels many infants remain at risk of acquiring HIV infection. Timely access to care and treatment for HIV-infected infants and young children remains an important challenge. We explore the extent to which public sector roll-out has met the estimated need for paediatric treatment in a rural South African setting. METHODS: Local facility and population-based data were used to compare the number of HIV infected children accessing HAART before 2008 with estimates of those in need of treatment from a deterministic modeling approach. The impact of programmatic improvements on estimated numbers of children in need of treatment was assessed in sensitivity analyses. FINDINGS: In the primary health care programme of HIV treatment 346 children <16 years of age initiated HAART by 2008; 245(70.8%) were aged 10 years or younger and only 2(<1%) under one year of age. Deterministic modeling predicted 2561 HIV infected children aged 10 or younger to be alive within the area of whom at least 521(20.3%) would have required immediate treatment. Were extended PMTCT uptake to reach 100% coverage the annual number of infected infants could be reduced by 49.2%. CONCLUSION: Despite progress in delivering decentralized HIV services to a rural sub-district in South Africa substantial unmet need for treatment remains. In a local setting very few children were initiated on treatment under 1 year of age and steps have now been taken to successfully improve early diagnosis and referral of infected infants.
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