UN partners seek to eliminate HIV in children
13-Jan-2010"AIDS has become the
leading cause of death among infants and young children in much of
sub-Saharan Africa," Joint UN Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) Executive
Director Michel Sidibé said during a visit to Sauri in western Kenya,
one of the villages in the so-called Millennium Villages Project (MVP).
The MVP, a partnership between the UN Development Programme (UNDP`),
The Earth Institute at Columbia University in New York, Millennium
Promise and local governments, provides a new approach to fighting
poverty and achieving the eight UN Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)
that seek to reduce a host of social ills by 2015. The sixth MDG
focuses on combating HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria and other diseases.
"We have seen that it is possible to virtually eliminate infant HIV
infections in high-income countries through HIV testing of pregnant
women, contraception, and the use of antiretroviral drugs during and
after delivery," Mr Sidibé said. "Now we must apply the knowledge and
tools to create an AIDS-free generation in Africa and the rest of the
world.
"The move towards universal prevention of mother-to-child HIV
transmission requires translating scientific evidence into routine
practice. With a concerted effort, we can fully curb the
mother-to-child transmission of HIV and bear witness as an HIV-free
generation is born in Africa and the world," he added.
UNAIDS and MVP joined forces in September to strengthen prevention of
mother-to-child HIV transmission (PMTCT) services at the village level
with the aim of creating "MTCT-free zones." In the Millennium Villages,
PMTCT services are integrated within the maternal-child health package
and a continuum of care is offered to the mother from the antenatal
period through delivery and the postnatal period.
Levels of HIV testing among pregnant women in the Millennium Village
sites have increased from 10 percent at baseline to over 60 percent in
three years. The UNAIDS-MVP partnership will further improve on these
gains by decreasing the incidence of HIV among women, meeting needs for
modern contraceptives and blocking transmission from mothers to their
babies.
"UNAIDS brings unrivalled global expertise, leadership, and detailed
strategies to the fight against HIV/AIDS, including PMTCT," said
Jeffrey Sachs, Director of the Earth Institute and Special Advisor to
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.
"By teaming up, UNAIDS and MVP will design and implement a powerful
system to bring PMTCT to near zero, and do so in a way that can be
utilized in other parts of Africa and the world," added Mr Sachs, who
accompanied Mr Sidibé during the five-day visit to Kenya.
Now covering some 500,000 people and growing, MVP is showing the
development community worldwide that an integrated package of
development interventions, supported by a modest financial investment –
about $110 per person annually over five to ten years – will be
instrumental to achieving the MDGs, specifically the fourth goal to
reduce child mortality, the fifth to improve maternal health, and the
sixth.
As a result of the project, there are now six health centres in Sauri,
where between 60 and 70 percent of people live on less than $1 per day.
Health throughout the Sauri village cluster has improved greatly since
MVP was set up in 2005 with a reduction in malaria cases, significant
improvements in maternal and child health, and increased access to HIV
testing and treatment.
Source: Afrol News
