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Nursing & Midwifery Leadership in Botswana and the AIDS response Prof. Sheila Tlou Co-Chair, Nursing Now Co-Chair, Global HIV Prevention Coalition Former UNAIDS Regional Director Former Minister of Health, Botswana. MAIN GOAL.
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Nursing & Midwifery Leadership in Botswana and the AIDS response Prof. Sheila Tlou Co-Chair, Nursing Now Co-Chair, Global HIV Prevention Coalition Former UNAIDS Regional Director Former Minister of Health, Botswana
MAIN GOAL • Share personal perspectives and experiences in executing role as Global Nurse Leader with mission to ” improve the wellbeing of people and their environments through research, education, and advocacy”. • Discuss areas of Nursing and Midwifery Leadership that can lead to gendered policy reform, health system reform, partnerships and financing for positive outcomes in the AIDS response Expected Outcome: Participants will identify pathways to maximize the impact of nurses and other frontline health workers in population and individual health outcomes, especially in the area of HIV and AIDS.
HIV/AIDS: A Communicable Disease at Centre of the SDGs Since 2000, over 35 million new HIV infections and 10 million deaths have been averted BUT, AIDS is still unfinished business • 36.9 millionpeople globally living with HIV • 1.8 million became newly infected with HIV, hence the Global HIV Prevention Coalition • 1.0 million died from AIDS-related illnesses • Encouraging News: More PLWH are accessing antiretroviral treatment (75-79-81)
Primary Health Care: Health For All by 2000 (Alma Ata, 1978 and beyond) • Accessible, acceptable, affordable, and universal. • Community participation in all aspects. • Caters for vulnerable, neglected groups (men, women and girls, older adults, key populations, indigenous people, etc.). • Botswana embraced above principles around 1975, and all Primary Health Care was by Nurses, Midwives and Primary Health Care Workers. • #Great success, I got interested from a Human Rights/Gender perspective
Academic, Scholar, Consultant, Activist • Generation of Knowledge through research: documented impact of HIV/AIDS on African women. Evidence at ICPD 1994 and Beijing 1995 (Power of Association) • As Educator, disseminated generated knowledge to ‘influence change’….trained nurses as Gender and HIV/AIDS service providers, scholars and activists (Managerial Positions: Ministerial HIV/AIDS Coordinators) • Community Activism- Founder, Society for Women and AIDS in Africa (SWAA, 1988); Botswana NGO Coalition (1993) • Documented impact of community-based interventions in HIV/AIDS prevention, treatment, care and support ( CSOs were great source of support and success as Minister).
Head of department/ WHO Collaborating Centre • Nursing and Midwifery Development in Primary Health Care (role in eMTCT, follow-up with pregnant women , point of care early infant diagnosis) • Convening nurses to accomplish desired goals and objectives using available resources efficiently and effectively • Strategic information for integration of HIV/AIDS in Curriculum planning, design and evaluation • Action research to produce better data to influence change ( Power of Evidence , not opinion)
Involvement in MDGs Process…for 2015 • Eradicating extreme poverty, combatting malnutrition, esp. among infants and ensuring food security for all; • Achieving at least universal primary school education; promoting gender equality and empowering women; • Reducing infant mortality; improving maternal health and reducing maternal mortality; • Combatting HIV/AIDS, TB, Malaria, and other major diseases; • Improving access to safe drinking water and promoting environmental sustainability; • Consolidating global partnerships for achieving development goals….ODA, Shared Responsibility & Global Solidarity.
Self as Politician/Minister, SADC/AU Chair 2004: Specially-elected MP, Minister of Health Research and good use of Knowledge Power……and Collaboration to Influence legal and Policy reform : • Abolition of Marital Power Act (2005). Gave women equal rights in acquisition, administration and disposal of property as well as inheritance, land and personal rights. • Domestic Violence Bill (2008) to promote peace and security in the home environment, plus advocacy at community level • HIV/AIDS: Comprehensive Prevention, Treatment, Care and Support Program, with 22% of budget to Health( still a Model).
Politician…HIV and AIDS… • Free PMTCT Services since 1999, in all health facilities (100% access). MTCT rate reduced 30% in 2002 to 4% in 2008, now less than 1%. • Free ARV program since 2001. Uptake over 90 %..( 60% are women). MMR due to AIDS reduced from 31% to 10% by 2008 • All accomplished with Nurses, Midwives and Civil society --trained in AIDS prevention, treatment & care….drug prescription & follow up patients, adherence rates of 90%. • Still a Model of deployment and interprofessional collaboration in resource-limited settings Botswana is one of few countries to have reached 90-90-90 targets. Serendipitous Outcome: More health professionals standing for political office……..great leadership !
Nursing/Midwifery Research and Care within the Sustainable Development Framework Integrated, Indivisible, Universal and Ambitious
SDG 3 for Nurses & Midwives: healthy lives & promote well-being at all ages, by 2030 • Reduce global maternal mortality ratio to less than 70/100,000 • End preventable deaths of newborns and children under 5, reducing neonatal mortality to 12 per 1,000, and under-5 mortality to 25 per 1,000 live births. • End epidemics of AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria and neglected tropical diseases ……..and other communicable diseases. 4. Reduce, by 1/3, premature mortality from non-communicable diseases, and promote mental health and well-being. 5. Ensure universal access to sexual and reproductive health-care services……..and integration into national strategies/programs 6. Achieve UHC, access to quality health services, & access to safe, effective, affordable essential medicines and vaccines for all
HIV and AIDS in the SDGs • Ultimately, ending the AIDS epidemic will require advocacy in: • dramatically advancing education, esp. for girls • equality, and respect for human rights • food security and economic prospects for all • good governance and implementation across all areas of development. • *Nursing Now! Leadership in Nursing and Midwifery Education, Scholarship and Interprofessional Practice.
Nursing Now Campaign 2020 • Launched globally on 27 February 2018, run in collaboration with the WHO and ICN …www.nursingnow.org • To raise the status and profile of nursing • To empower nurses to take their place at the heart of tackling 21st Century health challenges. • To improve perceptions of nurses, enhance their influence and maximise their contributions to ensuring that everyone everywhere has access to health and healthcare. • Main Advocacy: Nurses are a key part of the solution to today’s health challenges – if properly deployed, valued and included in health decision-making. • Involvement of citizens, the nursing community, and political leaders, esp. Ministers of Health in the campaign.
Lessons Learned: Nursing and Midwifery Leadership • Knowledge is Power, so nurse/midwife-led care is effective when evidence-based. • Nurses/midwives are the health professionals people know and trust; they are still the backbone to reaching HIV treatment and prevention targets for 2020 and 2030. • Great results when nurses/midwives are adequately educated, trained, remunerated, and supported. • Engagement of communities for service provision, promotion of human rights, ending stigma/discrimination, esp. in health settings. • Political office for nurses/midwives for good governance & commitment to SDGs and gender-responsive legislation and services…
"When spider webs unite, they can tie up a lion”. Let’s pull together as nurses and midwives to end HIV & AIDS by 2030 Thank you very much!