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Current ReportJuly 2007 -- Missing the Target #4 [PDF]July 2007 -- Missing the Target #4 Media Release [PDF] en Espańol -- Executive Summary[PDF] | Global Response [PDF] | Argentina [PDF] | Belize [PDF] | Dominican Republic [PDF] In The PressReport: AIDS Treatment Targets Hampered by Lack of Access to DrugsVoice of America - By Tendai Maphosa Global AIDS treatment will fall far short of a target to have five million people in Africa being treated in the next few years. Zackie Achmat and Other Global AIDS Activist Leaders Release New ... Overhaul Necessary to Reach New G8 AIDS Treatment Goals, AIDS ... Media ContactsChris Collins: +1 845-701-0158; ChrisCSF@aol.comGregg Gonsalves +27-78-456-3848; gregg.gonsalves@gmail.com Kay Marshall: +1-347-249-6375; kaymarshall@mac.com Previous ReportsNovember, 2006 ---ITPC AIDS Treatment Access materialsMay, 2006 -- ITPC AIDS Treatment Access Update [PDF] November 2005 -- ITPC AIDS Treatment Access Report [PDF] May 2006 ITPC Press call transcript [RTF] May 2006 ITPC Press Release [RTF] November 2005 Archive Executive SummaryThe world is still one million people short of the original "3 by 5" goal to put three million people on AIDS treatment by the end of 2005. The slow progress has already cost thousands of lives, and is destined to cost millions more. This is particularly tragic because evidence shows that AIDS treatment delivery is working.This report demonstrates what a catastrophic mistake and monumental betrayal it
will be if the G8 and the governments of countries heavily affected by AIDS renege
on their commitment to universal access to treatment, just when it is demonstrating
its potential to save millions and to pave the way for broader health systems reform.
This fourth edition of Missing the Target provides original, in-depth assessments
of the dynamics of AIDS treatment delivery in six countries -- Cambodia, China,
Malawi, Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. In addition to these new detailed
reports, it also includes updates from the six previous report countries -- Dominican
Republic, India, Kenya, Nigeria, Russia, and South Africa; and short summaries
from five other countries -- Argentina, Belize, Cameroon, Malaysia, and Morocco.
Though there are substantial challenges in every country, significant progress in
the numbers of people receiving treatment and wider delivery of support services is
clearly documented.
All engaged in the global AIDS response must now think and act boldly to
re-envision delivery of a range of essential health care services for the poor.
The effort to provide universal access to AIDS treatment represents the best hope
of establishing the systems, structures, and commitment needed to achieve the
1978 Alma-Ata Declaration goal of “health for all” since that commitment was
signed. If we lose this opportunity and the momentum it represents, we will have
squandered the energy that is propelling us into a new era of promise for delivering
health care in the developing world.
The pace of treatment delivery must continue to accelerate. The current rate
of growth -- 700,000 additional people received treatment last year -- means
the world will fall short of even the most modest interpretation of the
purposefully ambiguous new G8 treatment target -- and a full five million
people short of achieving global universal access by 2010.
The world has entered a new phase in scale up. While timely and expanded
distribution of ARVs remains the core objective, much greater attention is
now needed on emerging challenges such as reaching marginalised groups,
children, and people in rural areas, and providing vital support services such
as transportation and nutritional assistance.
Supplementary services, in addition to treatment, must be free if poor people
are to initiate and sustain care. Our research teams found that what is called
"free treatment" is not truly free to the vast majority of people. Transportation
costs and charges for diagnostic tests and medical care still put lifesaving
treatment out of reach for many.
Integration of prevention and treatment services is fundamental to building
healthier communities. Only a comprehensive and coordinated effort
will overcome the most difficult challenges in ending the epidemic. False
separation of prevention and treatment, divisive either-or debates, and
competition over resources must end.
The worsening shortage of doctors, nurses, and community health workers
who can provide HIV care and prevention requires increased financial
investments, coordinated policy reforms, and removal of fiscal limitations on
national health-related expenditures.
An in-country civil society team using a globally standardized survey instrument
prepared each of the reports in Missing the Target.
In Cambodia treatment access has increased steadily but there remains an
acute shortage of health care personnel, inadequate support for treatment
adherence, problems with the drug supply system, inattention to needed
social supports, fees for diagnostics and other necessary services, and limited
access to second-line treatment and TB services.
In China rapid expansion of treatment delivery is still falling behind
increasing need. Widespread stigma and extra charges for diagnostic tests
impede treatment access. Drugs for TB/HIV co-infection and second-line AIDS
therapy are scarce. UN agencies must be more outspoken about barriers to
treatment delivery.
Significant progress in Malawi is being hampered by a critical health care
worker shortage, particularly in rural areas. Few have access to PMTCT+ or
HIV testing, OI treatments are not readily available, TB services are not well
integrated in HIV care, and domestic spending is inadequate.
In Uganda a free ARV program has shown impressive results, yet demand
for treatment outstrips supply, uptake of PMTCT+ is low, fees for some
medical services impede access, second line and OI drugs are often not
available, and stock outs, corruption and under-financing plague the
response.
In Zambia treatment has markedly reduced mortality rates, but serious
inequities in access remain; availability of diagnostic tools, second-line
and OI drugs, and paediatric formulations is severely limited, stock outs
are frequent, PMTCT+ is largely unavailable in rural areas, and poverty
undermines access.
In Zimbabwe treatment access has improved, but political turmoil and
a deteriorating economy jeopardize gains; in some areas the health care
system is collapsing, hospitals and clinics are threatened with closure, there
are long lines for the public ARV program, frequent drug stock outs, and
widespread stigma against PLWHA. Greater assistance is needed from
multilateral agencies.
Specific challenges in treatment delivery cited by the other eleven countries include:
In the original six report countries...
Dominican Republic -- insufficient access to viral load testing; exclusion
of PLWHA and Haitian migrants from new government health insurance
program.
India -- National Plan not aggressive enough to provide universal access
by 2010; no plans from government on second-line ARVs or to ensure ARV
access for marginalized populations.
Kenya -- not enough CD4 testing equipment; poor coverage in rural areas.
Nigeria -- very low proportion of children in need are getting ARVs; not
enough viral load monitoring equipment.
Russia -- low uptake of ARVs due to limited awareness of availability and
inadequate social support; inadequate targeted programs for marginalized
groups, specifically IDUs; drug supply interruptions continue.
South Africa -- new National Strategic Plan process must move quickly to
address great gaps between need and access and between policy making
and implementation .
In the five new "short summary" countries...
Argentina -- coverage varies greatly by region with rural areas under-served.
Because of stigma, many in marginalized groups do not come forward to
seek treatment and so are not counted in treatment need numbers.
Belize -- insufficient attention to needs of marginalized and high risk groups;
serious shortfall in human resources capacity.
Cameroon -- registration and testing fees as well as transportation costs
make access to ARVs effectively impossible for many.
Malaysia -- disparities in treatment access by ethnic group; many hospitals
are not meeting their access targets.
Morocco -- limited access to OI drugs; only one viral load testing facility in
the country; insufficient access to CD4 equipment.
Global agency and donor findings
Global agencies and donors, partnering with governments, are helping to make the
many successes in treatment delivery possible. But donors have failed to establish a
formula to secure the predictable and sustainable funding on which universal access
depends. Our research also identifies many areas in which global programs must
improve their work:
PEPFAR's programs are saving many thousands of lives, but must do better
at reaching populations outside of urban centres, integrating treatment
services into existing health care structures, building public sector capacity,
and increasing support for health care worker education and retention.
Community health workers need living wages and other supports through
PEPFAR. The program’s misguided policies on abstinence-only programming,
sex work and harm reduction present considerable, self-imposed obstacles to
effectiveness and must end.
Donors must support the Global Fund's plan to triple in size. In many
countries, greater transparency is needed in financial and program
management of Global Fund grants, and civil society must be more fully
included on Country Coordinating Mechanisms (CCMs) so they can lend
expertise and serve as watchdogs over program implementation. The Fund
-- and its partner organizations -- must be prepared to intervene earlier and
more effectively when country implementers encounter challenges or are in
danger of losing grants.
UNAIDS and WHO provide important assistance on global treatment
scale up through policy development and, in some cases, through efforts
that facilitate the inclusion of civil society. But these agencies must be
more outspoken when national programs are mismanaged, targets are not
met, or vulnerable populations are neglected; it is part of the UN's moral
responsibility to speak out when countries fail their people. UNAIDS must
move forward swiftly with ambitious resource needs estimates that include
a package of health services for PLWHA; need estimates should demand
significant increases from both donors and national governments in heavily
affected countries.
All global agencies must help governments reach marginalised groups,
establish systems that will eliminate drug stock outs, provide CD4 and
other needed testing technologies, and integrate TB and other services into
treatment.
People who need access to AIDS treatment cannot rely on global institutions alone.
Developing country governments must take on greater leadership on HIV/AIDS.
PLWHA and civil society must engage with their governments and insist they do
more. In advocating for change, PLWHA and civil society members often face
serious challenges and risks. But Missing the Target shows that, even in countries
like China, advocates can speak up, tell the truth, and urge their governments to
act. These courageous voices need to be supported, encouraged, and honoured.
There can be no more excuses for losing this momentum or needlessly letting millions die of AIDS. The last three years have proven that concerted global efforts can save lives and build strong systems of care. |
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