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HCT Policy Guideline Orientation. Policy Vision, Mission and Aims. Vision: . A n enabling environment for HIV counselling and testing, where the majority of people in South Africa are knowledgeable about their HIV status, and able to act on this knowledge to ensure an HIV-free generation
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Policy Vision, Mission and Aims • Vision:. An enabling environment for HIV counselling and testing, where the majority of people in South Africa are knowledgeable about their HIV status, and able to act on this knowledge to ensure an HIV-free generation • Mission:To develop a sustainable, coordinated and integrated National HCT Programme in partnership with other stakeholders so as to expand access to and increase uptake of HCT services with the aim of appropriate referral for those in need of the continuum of care, treatment and support. • Aims: • To provide a National framework and guidance for the provision of HIV counselling and testing services in the public and private sectors in South Africa. • To provide a framework for conducting HIV counselling and testing among adults and children.
Objectives of the Policy guideline • The objectives of this policy guideline are to: • Provide core requirements and guidance to ensure the delivery of standardised, high quality, ethical HIV counselling and testing services; • Outline different types of HIV counselling and testing approaches for different circumstances and target groups; • Ensure compliance with a legal and human rights approach to HIV counselling and testing; • Expand access to HCT beyond formal health-care settings into community, private sector and non-health care environments; and • Ensure appropriate referral to treatment
C and T programme Objectives • The HIV counselling and testing programme seeks to: • Create an enabling environment that promotes universal access to safe, effective and good quality HCT services; • Encourage individuals, couples, families, and communities to test for HIV in the interests of their own health; • Promote support for positive living, healthy lifestyles and good nutrition; • Encourage and support the voluntary disclosure of HIV status and to minimise stigma; • Facilitate referral and access to prevention, treatment, care and support services following HIV testing; • Facilitate and promote integration of HCT with family planning (FP), tuberculosis (TB), sexually transmitted infections (STIs), and other communicable and non-communicable diseases; and • Integrate affordable, feasible, accessible, safe, and sustainable HCT services into the health system.
Circumstances for HIV testing • Individuals and couples • Pregnant mothers for PMTCT • Clinical diagnosis • Research and other screening purposes • Domestic violence and sexual assault • PEP • Court order • Abandoned babies • Pre requisite for MMC
Types of HCT • CICT (VCT) • PICT • Process of HCT follows
HIV Testing • Must be ethical, based on human rights and conducted within supportive environment and be performed where there is adequate health care infrastructure • Trained health care worker (professional nurse or doctor) must be responsible for administering the rapid HIV test • Human Tissue Act No. 65 of 1983 • Recommended algorithm: Serial as follows
HIV Testing cont.. • Issuing of written results • May be done at request • Preferably: written letter clearly identifying the patient by name, the date of the test, its outcome and the signature and designation of the issuing provider. • There should be a facility stamp on the document. It should be emphasized to patients who test HIV negative that the written results are a documentation of the results at that specific point in time and are not a substitute for consistent periodic testing. • Frequency of testing: • annual or more times depending on risk • Mandatory testing not recommended except: • Court order
Core Ethical principles • Counselling • Informed consent • VCT (CICT) • PICT • Illiteracy: right thumb • Inability to make a decision • Adults: National Health Act • Children: Children’s Act • Confidentiality and privacy • Shared confidentiality • Non discrimination • Infection control
HIV Counselling and Testing for Children • IN THE BEST INTEREST OF THE CHILD • Counselling • Informed consent • Testing • Confidentiality • Considers relevant legislation • Children’s Act, No. 38 of 2005 • Regulations on Sections 130-132 • PCR testing • For children<18 months • Alignment with new PMTCT guidelines • Alignment with the new Paediatric HIV & AIDS Management Guidelines • Children>18 months are tested with rapid antibody tests
HIV Counselling and Testing for Children • Provide access to the continuum of care and promote a child’s physical and emotional welfare. • When the mother’s status is known and the child may have been exposed to HIV. • When the status of the mother is unknown (and or her whereabouts are unknown). • When the child may have been wet-nursed or breast-fed by a woman whose status is unknown. • When the child may have experienced or been at risk of sexual assault: PEP should be provided. • When it is in the best interest of the child that the HIV test will promote the physical and emotional welfare where the child is being considered for foster or adoption placement. • Per court order
HIV Testing in infants • Abandoned Children • Health care workers can confer with each other and consent for the child • Establish exposure and facilitate prophylaxis especially for placement and management of the child • Alignment with new PMTCT guidelines • Alignment with the new Paediatric HIV & AIDS Management Guidelines • Refer to figure 3 and 4 for flow diagrams • Abuse must be reported
HIV Counselling and testing of special populations • Pregnant mothers: PMTCT: PICT • PEP: exposure at work • Survivors of sexual assault: PEP • Alleged sexual offenders • Male and female prisoners
Quality Assurance • All training service providers should be accredited by SAQA • Mentoring of counsellors should be done regularly • Compliance to diagnostic procedures and SOPs • All suppliers of the approved rapid HIV test kits should provide training for all provinces on how to use the test kits • All test kits on National Tender are evaluated by NICD • All new batches are evaluated by NICD before distribution • Formal laboratory-based quality control for test kits • Internal (Product-specific) • External (Programme-driven)
Social Mobilisation • Objectives • Integrate HCT services into the primary health care package. • Create an enabling environment for HIV counselling and testing. • Facilitate support for positive living, healthy lifestyle and nutrition. • Expand access to HCT beyond formal health care settings such as community and non-health care settings.
Target audience • The main target audience for HCT communication is sexually active men and women aged between 15-49 years with special efforts to reach the following: • Men • Couples/sexual partners. • Pregnant women and family planning clients • Vulnerable and marginalized groups such as commercial sex workers (CSW), Men sleeping with men (MSM), migrants, intra-venous drug users etc. • Men and women presenting with TB, STIs, OIs. • Clients seeking PEP
Key Communication Areas • HCT Package • Importance and benefits of early HIV diagnosis • Implications of the test outcome • Information on referral services • How and where to access services • Mechanisms of communication • Government campaigns • Community-based activities • Papers at conferences and in journals • Mass media such as television and radio, websites, social networks such as twitter and face book • Small media such as brochures and pamphlets • Interpersonal communication and peer education • Outreach in the workplace
Monitoring and Evaluation AIM: • Ensure achievement of maximum health benefit for the population served as well as improve the quality of services offered. • OBJECTIVES: • Monitor progress on the provision of VCT services and measure its effectiveness • Identify gaps and weaknesses in service provision and address them • Inform planning, prioritisation, allocation and management of resources for VCT services • Maintain data and referral tracking systems in accordance to existing systems
Relevant Legislation The Constitution of the Republic of South Africa 108 of 1996. National Health Act No. 61 of 2003 Children’s Act No. 38 of 2005 Human Tissue Act No. 65 of 1983 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Medicines and Related Substances Act, Act 101 of 1965 Health Professions Act No. 56 of 1974 Pharmacy Act No. 53 of 1974 Nursing Act No. 50 of 1978 Basic conditions of employment Act No. 75 of 1997. Public service regulations amendments, 2001 Occupational Health and Safety Act No.85 of 1993 Labour Relations Act No. 66 of 1995 The Criminal Law (Sexual Offences & Related Matters) Amendment Act No. 32 of 2007 This framework may not be exhaustive 21