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From: PlusNews <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, May 4, 2012 at 1:38 PM
Subject: DRC: HIV effort needs government, donor commitment to succeed
To: Elisabeth Janaina <[email protected]>


DRC: HIV effort needs government, donor commitment to succeed

KINSHASA, 4 May 2012 (PLUSNEWS) - Many national hospitals in the
Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) are not accepting new HIV-positive
patients for antiretroviral (ARV) treatment. The only way to get onto
a treatment list is to wait until a space opens up due to a death or
drop-out, or seek the limited treatment options available outside the
government's programmes, but few people can afford the drugs.

"At least in the big cities like Kinshasa [the capital] and Lubumbashi
there is some coverage, but in rural areas there is a big problem,"
said Erick Ngoie, head of advocacy for Union Congolaise des
Organisations des personnes vivant avec le VIH (UCOP-Plus), an
umbrella network of organizations of people living with HIV in DRC.

Chief among the problems in the DRC's fight against HIV is a severe
funding deficit. [
http://www.plusnews.org/Report/88718/DRC-Funding-crunch-threatens-ARV-rollout
]. A major World Bank project recently closed after six years, while
UNITAID, an international health financing mechanism that provides
funding for paediatric and second-line ARVs, will end its funding to
the DRC in December 2012. The cancellation of Round 11 funding by the
Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria is likely to
worsen the situation.

"ARV coverage in Kinshasa is about 30 percent, and much lower in the
rest of the country - close to half of the health zones are not
covered by any HIV treatment programme," said Anja De Weggheleire,
medical coordinator for Médecins Sans Frontières in the DRC. "Many
health zones may offer HIV services at only one site, and even then it
may not be the whole package."

Only 12.3 percent of people who need life-prolonging ARV treatment
have access to it, according to government statistics. Poor
information and low testing coverage - just 9 percent of adults know
their HIV status - means people are often diagnosed in very advanced
stages of illness, when treatment options are limited.

"There is an urgent need for more centres because people need access
to testing earlier. Many patients come here very late, with multiple
pathologies... some arrive here and only survive a few days, while
others die on the way to the hospital," said Dr Laura Rinchey, the
manager of the MSF-run Centre Hospitalier de Kabinda (CHK) in
Kinshasa.

MSF started 2012 with a campaign to highlight the huge funding gap in
the DRC's HIV treatment programme, and urged people to seek testing
and treatment. Since then, demand for services at CHK has gone up
significantly, straining the centre's resources. "We are now treating
about 3,200 patients, which is about 20 percent of people on ARVs in
Kinshasa," Rinchey said.

At Réseau National d'Organisations Assises Communautaire (RNOAC), a
national network of community-based organizations, patients who are
well enough to live at home come to collect drugs provided by MSF and
receive support from other people living with HIV.

"We help them deal with stigma, teach them how to live a healthy life,
with a balanced diet, and give them treatment education," said Jean
Lukela, coordinator of RNOAC. Stigma remains high, Lukela said, with
many people being ostracized by their families after they test
positive for HIV, and others turning to churches for 'healing', rather
than seeking medical help.

Clarrise Kambele, 30, frail and recovering from an HIV-related illness
that nearly killed her, shelters at the RNOAC centre. Diagnosed with
HIV in 2009, she didn't start taking ARVs until she fell very ill in
2012. Her husband abandoned her and took their child to his parents'
home, leaving her to fend for herself. Too sick to work, Kambele was
soon living on the streets, where an RNOAC volunteer found her and
brought her to the NGO.

"I was very weak and my feet had swollen so much I couldn't walk. Now
I'm still weak but much better, but I don't know what will happen to
me when I leave here. My husband won't take me back - he won't even
let me see our child - and my own family is dead," she told
IRIN/PlusNews.

"We need the government to take HIV as a priority, and take the lead
in HIV information so people can know that someone living with HIV is
just like anyone else - they should not be shunned," Lukela said. "All
support for HIV programmes comes from outside - we need the government
to put its hands in its own pockets to pay for HIV treatment and
care."

UCOP-Plus's Ngoie noted that unless donors and the government commit
more resources to fighting HIV, the country's programmes will probably
fail. "Because of poor funding, NGOs have disappeared, community-based
agencies have closed. Some of the centres that remain have no people
trained to handle HIV," he said.

"In this situation, we cannot achieve 'zero new infections, zero
deaths and zero stigma'," Ngoie stressed. "We don't want this to be
just a slogan, we want it to be real."

kr/he
[END]

This report online: http://www.plusnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=95412



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