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INTEGRATING PREVENTION INTO HIV CARE AND TREATMENT KENYA’S PROGRESS AND PLANS

INTEGRATING PREVENTION INTO HIV CARE AND TREATMENT KENYA’S PROGRESS AND PLANS. DR. EMILY KOECH-KETER DIRECTOR OF PROGRAMS ICAP, KENYA. Kenya HIV statistics. HIV prevalence 7.4% (KAIS 2007); 1.4 million HIV-infected people 500,000 people enrolled in HIV care

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INTEGRATING PREVENTION INTO HIV CARE AND TREATMENT KENYA’S PROGRESS AND PLANS

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  1. INTEGRATING PREVENTION INTO HIV CARE AND TREATMENTKENYA’S PROGRESS AND PLANS DR. EMILY KOECH-KETERDIRECTOR OF PROGRAMSICAP, KENYA

  2. Kenya HIV statistics • HIV prevalence 7.4% (KAIS 2007); 1.4 million HIV-infected people • 500,000 people enrolled in HIV care • 213,000 people on antiretroviral therapy (June 2008) • 500 facilities offering HIV care • 80% are public health facilities

  3. 45% of married HIV-infected persons, have HIV uninfected partner (KAIS 2007 ) Low rates of consistent condom use 80% of HIV-infected do not have correct knowledge of their HIV status (KAIS 2007 ) High rates of STI in populations in Sub-Saharan African countries; 81% of HIV-infected Kenyan adults have genital herpes (KAIS 2007 ) Increased sexual activity and unprotected sex among HIV-infected people once they are on ART (Bunnell CROI 2008) Why Prevention with Positives (PwP) Kenya statistics

  4. NASCOP-led PWP technical working group (TWG) established: MOH, TB and Reproductive health programs WHO, UNAIDS, CDC, USAID, Implementing partners, FBO, etc TWG functions: Spearhead development and implementation of national PWP policies and guidelines, training and implementation materials, M & E tools and roll-out plan Oversee coordination of PwP activities at clinical and community levels Advancing Policy and Guidelines

  5. 2006-2007, PEPFAR/CDC developed and piloted PWP materials for clinical settings in 3 different sites in Kenya MOH and partners reviewed and adapted materials (flipcharts, pocket cards, posters, handouts) Materials translated into Swahili and printed June 2008 PwP Training of Trainers (TOT)s conducted TOTs were health care workers from TB and HIV programs selected by MOH and implementing care and treatment partners Represented 10 regions ICAP to contribute to further TOTs and local trainings Development of Training Curriculum

  6. PWP Clinic Materials Materials stress 5 steps: disclosure, partner testing, condom use, STI diagnosis/treatment, and FP

  7. A detailed roll out plan, including regional sensitization meetings planned Two PwP TOTs held; These trainers will roll-out regional trainings Plans to develop a package that will clearly outline community-based PwP activities. PEPFAR evaluation to examine a comprehensive PWP approach in clinical settings to start in Central Province in 2008-2009 National Planned activities

  8. Human resources Inadequate staffing, increased work load, low retention, frequent transfers Inadequate training to address prevention issues Limited physical infrastructure - privacy Ensuring commodity security – (condoms, FP methods, STI drugs) Creating parallel services – (HIV care, STI services and reproductive health Documentation PwP implementation challenges

  9. International Centres for AIDS Care and Treatment Programs (ICAP), Kenya • In Kenya, ICAP supports HIV care and ART in Central and Eastern Provinces: • 73 health care facilities • 46,468 people in care • 20,176 on ART

  10. ART adherence emphasized during routine counseling Condoms provided at HIV clinics STI treatment available for symptomatic patients FP counseling and services available on request Currently working on strengthening partner testing Training and use of Peer educators to deliver basic HIV services, counseling, sharing experiences However integration of PwP activities in many of the clinics has been weak, difficult, not comprehensive and not standardized or routinely performed. Current Prevention activities in HIV clinics-I

  11. Partner testing- piloting of family HIV status forms to prompt patients to bring partners and children for testing. The results indicated: Increased number of children brought for testing Increased request by patients for counseling on how to disclose Perceived by health care workers to be time consuming and leading to increased work load HIV testing often by referral of patients to VCT which leads to patient loss. Trying to move partner testing to HIV clinic Current Prevention activities in HIV clinics-II

  12. Members of the PwP technical working group Currently working with NASCOP in the integration of FP/STI component Some ICAP staff are trained as facilitators for PwP and will be involved in regional trainings. ICAP will conduct Regional TOT trainings in 6 regions. Those trained will subsequently facilitate PwP trainings within the region. PwP intervention are being carried out in ICAP supported facilities and the outcome will inform national role out. ICAP’s role at National level

  13. To evaluate efficacy of HIV prevention interventions integrated into routine care and treatment of HIV patients in clinics in resource-limited settings To assess feasibility/acceptability of integrating prevention interventions into routine care and treatment of HIV patients PwP PHE Objectives

  14. 12-month group randomized trial in 3 countries, Kenya, Tanzania and Namibia 6 clinics per country; matched pairs of 3 intervention and 3 control Clinics matched on patient load, health care provider, clinic space Train providers in intervention sites to deliver interventions; standard of care given to control sites 200 patients enrolled per site (care only and ART) Study Design

  15. Provider delivered prevention messages Reducing risky sexual behaviour Condom use HIV status disclosure Partner HIV testing ART medication adherence STI assessment and treatment FP counseling and services Alcohol reduction *Lay counsellors will be trained and used to counsel patients on these issues. Interventions

  16. Cotrimoxazole prophylaxis Multivitamin supplementation ARV if eligible Adherence counseling OI diagnosis and management Laboratory monitoring *STI/FP services, counseling on disclosure, partner testing are not provided routinely Standards of care

  17. Behavioural: Risky sexual behaviour HIV testing of partners Disclosure Alcohol use ARV medication adherence Biologic STI symptoms Unintended pregnancies Service delivery Treatment of STI FP counseling and services Outcome Measures

  18. Study coordinator recruited and trained Initial pilot site identified HIV clinic staff trained to deliver HIV prevention messages and STI services Supportive supervision provided by study coordinator Interviews to be held with the implementing staff on the 11-12 Aug, to gather information on their experiences with implementation Information gathered will help assess feasibility of the expansion of the study Progress on the PHE

  19. Ministry of Health, NASCOP CDC USAID/APHIA II WRP/DoD Provincial Medical Office DMOH and MOH hospitals Hospital Management Teams Implementing partners Acknowledgments

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