1 expansion of couples voluntary hiv counseling and testing in the copperbelt province in zambia: an...
TRANSCRIPT
1
Expansion of Couples Voluntary HIV Counseling and Testing in the Copperbelt Province in Zambia: an examination of the distribution of HIV serostatus
within the province
Carolina Kwok B.Sc (PT), MPH CVCT Program Manager, CopperbeltZambia Emory HIV Research Project
Afri-Can Synchronicity ForumEntebbe, Uganda18 January 2013
2
Outline
• Background of CVCT • Methods• Results• Discussion• Challenges• Conclusion
3
ZAMBIA
4
Background of the Copperbelt• ZAMBIA TOTAL POPULATION: 13,046,508 (Zambia Census, 2010)– Approximately 51% of the population are women and 49% are
men– 61% live in rural areas, 39% live in urban residences– Population density of 17.3 persons/sq. km
• Copperbelt – population, 1,958,623 (Zambia Census, 2010)– Ndola – 455, 194– Kitwe – 522,092– Chingola –210,073– Luanshya – 153,117
• Copperbelt is the second most densely populated region in Zambia• These districts are industrial and commercial hubs
5
Background• In Zambia, approximately 70% of HIV infections are acquired in
marriage• 15-20% of the couples counseled and tested at CVCT have
discordant results• Studies in Rwanda and Zambia have shown HIV transmission to HIV
negative partners in discordant couples is 20-25% per year in couples that do not know they are discordant
• In discordant couples who underwent CVCT, HIV transmission to HIV negative partners decreased to 3-7% per year
• Previous publications have estimated that scale-up of Couples’ Voluntary HIV Counseling and Testing (CVCT) services can reduce heterosexual transmission by 35-80% in Zambia
6
HIV PREVALENCE AMONG COHABITATING PARTNERS IN ZAMBIA
(ZAMBIA DHS, 2007)
7
Background of the Copperbelt - II
• Prevalence of HIV in the Copperbelt:–17% of population (Zambia DHS, 2007)•21.6% in women aged 15-49•12.3% in men aged 15-49
8
• Began couples’ counseling and testing in Lusaka in 1994
• Tested >11,000 couples in Ndola and Kitwe from 2004-2006 as part of a research protocol (clinical trial)
• Low-level testing at research site continued in Ndola
• CVCT programs in Chipulukusu, Lubuto clinics and the research site in Ndola from 2007- July 2010 reached more than 4000 couples
HISTORY OF CVCT IN ZAMBIA AND THE COPPERBELT
9
HISTORY OF CVCT IN ZAMBIA AND THE COPPERBELT
• New grant from Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA), administered by PATH, under the Arise program, launched in October 2010
• GOAL
– To establish CVCT as a standard of care in government clinics
• TARGET
– To expand CVCT to 60 Copperbelt clinics, reaching 56,000 couples in 30 months (= 15% of all cohabiting couples in target area to establish social norms)
– Additional funding received in 2012 to expand testing to 68,000 couples and to increase weekday CVCT
10
PROPOSED CVCT EXPANSION COPPERBELT PROVINCE
11
METHODS - I• Collaboration with the, Ministry of Health (MoH) District
Health Management teams (DHMT) and Konkola Copper Mines, Plc (KCM) at all levels of implementation
• Selection of clinics and staff are made by the DHMT and KCM coordinators
• Trainings are conducted as per the standard training manuals developed by RZHRG in collaboration with the CDC – These include manuals for : Health Center Managers,
Promoters, Data/Lab Managers, Promoter Managers and Counselors
– www.cdc.gov/globalaids/resources/prevention/chct-training.html
• Trainings include didactic and practical components
12
CVCT EXPANSION: COPPERBELT
Funding approve
d August
2010
MoH-PMO Approval Sep 2010
Met with key
stakeholders at DHMT
August-October
2010
Identified clinics in Ndola
August 2010
Trained clinic staff September 2010 - ongoing
Opened first Ndola
expansion clinic,
October 2010
Start of expansion into Kitwe
– 18 clinicsMarch 2011
Start of expansion
into Chingola clinics,
October 2011
Start of expansion
into Luanshya, May 2012
TODAY
13
METHODS - II
• From project inception, ZEHRP has been able to open clinics every quarter up to August 2012• Requires the close
collaboration with all clinic staff, ZEHRP trainers and staff and promotion teams
14
CURRENT CVCT EXPANSION COPPERBELT PROVINCE
15
METHODS - III• Clinic health care providers trained by ZEHRP
perform weekend CVCT and record test results anonymously in standardized logbooks
• Each couple given a unique ID, no names recorded
• Follow up and appropriate referral services are provided
• Weekend CVCT was initiated to minimize disruption to weekday clinic activities and to encourage increased male involvement
16
RESULTS
17
CVCT EXPANSION COPPERBELT PROVINCE
• From October 2010 - November 2012:– ZEHRP opened clinics in 4 districts in the Copperbelt Province:
Ndola, Kitwe, Chingola and Luanshya
• ZEHRP has 54,498 tested couples in the Copperbelt Province
• Currently providing weekend CVCT services in:– 14 clinics in Ndola– 18 clinics in Kitwe– 12 Clinics in Chingola– 6 clinics in Luanshya
18
Cumulative Number of Couples Tested in the Copperbelt, October 2010 – November 2012
19
CHARACTERISTICS OF COUPLES TESTED IN THE COPPERBELT, OCTOBER 2010-NOVEMBER 2012
20
Serostatus Distribution in the Copperbelt
October 2010 – November 2012
21
Serostatus distribution in 4 districts in the Copperbelt,October 2010 – November 2012
22
Age distribution of women in discordant relationships per district, October 2010 – November 2012
23
Age distribution of men in discordant relationships per district, October 2010 – November 2012
24
PREGNANT WOMEN TESTED WITH PARTNERS AND THEIR HIV SEROSTATUS – per district
October 2010 – November 2012
25
Discussion • The districts we have most data on, Kitwe and Ndola,
reflect the provincial statistics • In Chingola and Luanshya, CVCT is still being established
and coverage of the population still is at early stages, however, general trend of higher prevalence of M-F+ noted
• Larger proportion of pregnant women in Ndola in M+F- partnerships, otherwise, no clear trend yet of HIV serostatus distribution in pregnant women tested with their partners
26
Discussion - II
• Largest proportion of women in discordant relationships between the ages of 21-30
• Largest proportion of men in discordant relationships are found in older age ranges, 25-40
• Similar patterns found in all districts• Majority of couples tested are in
cohabitating relationships
27
Challenges• Logistics in transport, data management, mitigating unforeseen
events–Strategies have been developed to manage these challenges
including setting up satellite offices, having schedules for pick up and delivery of materials
• Ensuring fidelity to CVCT procedures –Solutions: training with regular refresher trainings and use of
satellite sites for monitoring and evaluation• Each district has their own vision of CVCT integration–Close collaboration with local DHMT and clinics ensures
success• Establishing CVCT as a social norm is still an ongoing process
28
Conclusion• Information on serostatus distribution can indicate
areas of intervention– I.e.. Areas of high M-F+ couples can be prioritized for VMMC interventions– Identify at risk age groups and target CVCT promotions
• Confirms the need for CVCT in order to target a high risk group within Zambia – cohabitating partners
• Identification of discordant couples is integral in Zambia where the majority of HIV transmission occurs between cohabitating heterosexual couples
• Scale up of CVCT is a feasible endeavour with the close collaboration of all stakeholders
29
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTSSpecial thanks to the support from:
PATHCIDAIAVINIH
CDC Centre of Excellence GrantCANSSA
Ministry of Health - Zambia
30
THANK YOU!