AFRICA: Interview with Stephen Lewis, UN Special Envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa

[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]


NAIROBI, 1 December (IRIN) - 
Stephen Lewis UN Special Envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa. Credit: IRIN Stephen 
Lewis is the UN Special Envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa, and has been a key 
campaigner for urgent and robust international action to meet the challenge of 
the pandemic. He spoke to IRIN/PlusNews about his optimism over the '3 by 5' 
initiative.

QUESTION: After the problems seen in Arusha with the Global Fund's next round 
and donors' apparent reluctance to increase their funding, what guarantees of 
sustainability can mass antiretroviral (ARV) treatment have?

ANSWER: My own feeling is that it will be impossible for the western world to 
turn off the financial tap once the treatment is underway. The treatment will 
be abridged by the amount of money available, but I think however many people 
are put into treatment, that treatment will be sustained. I do not foresee a 
situation where the resources will suddenly be cut off in the middle of the 
treatment.

I also feel confident that we're going to turn a significant financial corner 
in 2005; that there's something really important happening, which isn't fully 
understood yet, and that's that the United Kingdom is taking over the AIDS 
agenda. The UK has the chairpersonship of the G8 next year, and of the European 
Union. They've already said they're going to host the Global Fund meeting in 
September, and they've asked for a major meeting in March to bring together all 
the major players.

[Chancellor of the Exchequer] Gordon Brown is pursuing relentlessly 
[industrialised countries], moving them to the 0.7 percent of GDP target for 
ODA [Overseas Development Aid]. The way in which the United Kingdom is taking 
on this agenda finally gives leadership to what has been the most difficult 
problem on the planet: the leadership simply has not been there before.

So, I have a cautious optimism that we're about to see a significant jump in 
resources. And I'm one of those people who still believe that it is possible to 
achieve the WHO's [World Health Organisation] target of three million people in 
treatment by 2005. I genuinely believe it's still within reach, and that the 
momentum is picking up at country level. I don't want to pretend it's going to 
be easy, though - it's going to be very tough.

Q: Are we urging poor countries to take on life-or-death commitments that are 
dependent on erratic outside funding?

A: In a sense we are. Let's take Lesotho, for example: they want to have 28,000 
people on treatment by 2005, and this is without question one of the poorest 
countries on the face of the earth; a country that lacks capacity and has one 
of the highest prevalence rates in the world. Nevertheless, the government is 
so determined to save its people that I feel nothing will stop them, and if 
Global Fund money suddenly dried up, they'd be on the hook, but I don't believe 
their treatment programme would fall apart - because every one of these 
countries understands they are in a life-or-death struggle. Personally, I don't 
believe they'll be faced by abandonment but, if that terrible prospect 
happened, they would somehow sustain treatment.

Q: To what extent has the recent controversy around some generic companies 
withdrawing from the World Health Organisation's prequalification list 
threatened the survival of ARV programmes?

A: I don't think it's threatened it one whit. I think what is important is to 
recognise that what the WHO was doing was being fiercely protective of quality 
assurance. I think the significant thing that's happened is not that the drugs 
were de-listed because they're of lesser quality, but because some of the 
bioequivalence work done by others was shoddy.

What I think is really important is the fact that two of [generic drug 
manufacturer] CIPLA's drugs have been reinstated after they were given 
appropriate bioequivalency studies. In early 2005 I think you'll see additional 
drugs reinstated and new drugs put on the list. The WHO's 3 by 5 programme and 
its prequalification process, and the support they've given for generics, are 
among the most dramatic and visionary interventions of any made by the UN since 
this began.

Q: Isn't there a danger that the positive living aspect of HIV/AIDS treatment 
is being lost with all the focus on ART?

A: There is inevitably the argument being put that prevention is being 
sidelined by this obsession with treatment, and that nutrition is being 
diminished somewhat, and that the various opportunistic infections are being 
inadequately attended to, and that the simple truth of positive living is being 
diminished because of the obsession with ARVs - I understand that. But my own 
feeling is that once we get treatment significantly underway, everything else 
will be given it's due.

It was inevitable, as you have 25 million people in Africa fighting for 
survival, that the treatment process would preoccupy us. But it will calm down 
and, as it does, the focus on positive living and nutrition - all these things 
- will reassert their place again. I don't really think they're being lost, but 
I think the debate and the loud discourse about treatment inevitably takes the 
centre of attention.

[Meanwhile] the health sector must benefit from what's happening, otherwise it 
makes no sense - it must include the building of capacity: they won't be able 
to sustain the treatment unless they have greater capacity. In many ways 
capacity is an even greater hurdle than the flow of resources. Treatment must 
not displace all the other priorities in the health system. We have to 
recognise ARVs are the centrepiece of the struggle at the moment, but the 
treatment of AIDS must be seen as a way to strengthen capacity and 
infrastructure.

Q: What do you think are the key components of a successful government rollout 
of ART?

A: Number one: there must be a voluntary testing and counselling culture 
developed in the country - testing must become central to the response and very 
careful and sophisticated counselling techniques must be developed and honoured 
and implemented. Number two, I think, is the constant and steady and reliable 
flow of drugs - those drugs must never be interrupted. Overall, it would be 
preferable to have the fixed-dose combination generic as the first line of 
response. It may be that the brand-name products will one day come up with a 
fixed-dose combination of their own but, at the moment, we need a continuous 
flow of the fixed-dose combination drugs.

Number three: we need the facilities and the capacity to sustain the treatment, 
and that means an adequate number of health professionals, which means an 
emergency training intervention - you don't always need a doctor or even a 
nurse, but you do need people who are carefully trained in the minimum 
requirements.

We can't continue to lose health professionals from these high-prevalence 
countries - western countries have to come up with an agreement whereby we 
won't be poaching health workers from these countries; they have to be paid an 
adequate salary and given benefits, so that they'll be induced to stay in their 
countries.

The fourth component is to make sure that you have a network of community 
health workers, who can follow the people who have AIDS back into their 
communities and make sure the regimens are adhered to, and that resistance or 
side effects are dealt with - the most recent UNAIDS report showed that 90 
percent of the care is being done at a community level. I'm probably missing 
many things, but for me those four points are key.

There's another ingredient people don't talk about enough, and that's food; I'm 
not merely talking nutrition; I'm talking survival - enough food not to be 
starving and perpetually hungry; so hungry it robs your immune system of its 
ability to fight the virus. The problem of food in so many of the southern 
African countries is desperately acute.

Again, you have a UN agency which is showing an astonishing resolve and 
response, and that's the WFP [World Food Programme]. What they're doing at a 
country level - you just have to see it to believe it. They've completely 
enlarged their focus, so they're not only responding to natural disasters, 
they're responding to the human predicament of AIDS.

Q: Beyond the rhetoric, are people living with AIDS really considered an asset 
in the response to HIV and AIDS, rather than the source of the problem?

A: I think the rhetoric is largely illusory - I don't trust the rhetoric. When 
I travel I don't see it being translated into genuine respect for people living 
with AIDS, and recognition of what they can contribute. A lot of it is 
extremely pro-forma and offensive, and it's used as a way of fobbing off the 
issue. I think it varies from country to country but, in most cases I've 
encountered, the government considers the people living with AIDS, who are 
leading the fight against prevention, as more of a nuisance than real 
contributors.

They just simply don't get enough of a hearing, because it's not yet understood 
that they can contribute because they are the experts - they know everything 
about the virus. They should be meeting with ministries of health on a daily 
basis and talking to all the other sectors, including education and 
agriculture, and they should be demonstrating to governments - whether it's 
through the workplace or community programmes - how you overcome stigma. They 
should be integrated completely into public policy at every level and in every 
sector, and they are not.

I never see due respect for the very knowledgeable and important community of 
people living with AIDS. I'm constantly reminding communities and governments 
that it's not just respect that's needed, it's also a recognition that you 
can't afford to lose this body of knowledge.

December 2004
[ENDS]

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