Scaling up antiretroviral therapy in Africa: learning from tuberculosis control programmes--the case of Malawi.
The rapid and massive scale-up of antiretroviral drug therapy (ART) so needed in sub-Saharan Africa will not be possible using a 'medicalised' model. A more simple approach is required. DOTS has been used now for many years to provide successful anti-tuberculosis treatment to millions of patients in poor countries of the world, and many of the established concepts can be used for the delivery of ART. Malawi, a small and impoverished country in sub-Saharan Africa, is embarking on a national scale-up of ART. In this review we describe how we have adopted several of the principles of DOTS for delivering ART in Malawi: case finding and registration, treatment, monitoring, drug procurement, staffing and the issue of free drugs. We also discuss ART for HIV-infected TB patients. We hope that by using the DOTS approach we will be able to deliver ART to large numbers of HIV-infected patients under controlled conditions, and minimise the risk of developing drug resistance.
Item Type | Article |
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Keywords | AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections, Africa South of the Sahara, Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active, Communicable Disease Control, Directly Observed Therapy, HIV Infections, Humans, Malawi, Prevalence, Treatment Outcome, Tuberculosis, AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections, drug therapy, epidemiology, Africa South of the Sahara, epidemiology, Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active, standards, Communicable Disease Control, organization & administration, Directly Observed Therapy, HIV Infections, drug therapy, epidemiology, Humans, Malawi, epidemiology, Prevalence, Treatment Outcome, Tuberculosis, epidemiology, prevention & control |
ISI | 232422100002 |