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RESEARCH AND PRACTICE |
Robert Pawinski and Umesh Lalloo are with the Enhancing Care Initiative, KwaZulu-Natal, Nelson R. Mandela School of Medicine, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Congella, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Robert Pawinski, Enhancing Care Initiative, KwaZulu-Natal, Nelson R. Mandela School of Medicine, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Umbilo Road, Congella, KwaZulu-Natal (e-mail: pawinskir{at}ukwazulu-natal.ac.za).
| ABSTRACT |
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The KwaZulu-Natal Enhancing Care Initiative is a program developed by a consortium of members who represent 4 sectors: academia, government, nongovernmental and community-based organizations, and the business sector. The Initiative was formed to develop a plan for improved care and support for people with HIV/AIDS and who live in resource-constrained settings in the province of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. A needs analysis helped to determine the following priorities in prevention, treatment, care, and support: training, grant-seeking, prevention, and care and treatment, including provision of antiretroviral therapy. A partnership approach resulted in better access to a wider community of people, information, and resources, and facilitated rapid program implementation. Creative approaches promptly translated research into policy and practice.
| INTRODUCTION |
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In 2000, the South African National Department of Health released the HIV/AIDS/ STD Strategic Plan for South Africa 20002005,6 which focused on prevention and provided a framework for a multisectoral (also known as multidisciplinary) response to HIV/ AIDS. It was only in November 2003, after prolonged controversy, that the NDoH launched the Comprehensive HIV and AIDS Care and Treatment Plan for South Africa to address the wide-scale provision of antiretroviral therapy in the public sector.79
| METHODS |
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Figure 1
illustrates the process this team followed,10 which culminated in the implementation of a proposal based on the results of operational research11 and funded by the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria (GFATM). The ECI KZN team used research to help shape policies that led to implementation of one of the largest HIV/AIDS prevention, care, and support programs in sub-Saharan Africa.
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| RESULTS |
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Partners were privileged to be part of a team, and perceived that international collaborators, such as the Harvard School of Public Health, helped to raise the profile of their program and their contributions at a community level. In one case, an exercise to budget for scaling-up of antiretroviral therapy also helped an ECI KZN partner to prepare a successful grant proposal to the Presidents Emergency Plan for HIV/AIDS. A small NGO partner linked to a rural government hospital collaborated with the local medical school and the Yale AIDS Program to provide antiretroviral therapy to tuberculosis patients undergoing DOTS (directly-observed treatment, short-course) in one of the first strategies successfully implemented in a rural district (using GFATM funds and other foundation grants).19,20 This program expanded its provincial services more rapidly than any other site in KwaZulu-Natal after the antiretroviral therapy program began. The academic team at the medical school was also able to set up one of the largest clinical HIV/AIDS postgraduate training programs in sub-Saharan Africa21 to meet the training needs of the province. Thus, the teams priorities changed from immediate funding and training needs to provide a sustained continuing education strategy to meet ever increasing human capacity needs.
| DISCUSSION |
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The opportunity to develop research tools facilitated a partnership for joint implementation of subsequent strategic initiatives. The successful proposal and unfortunate 2-year delay of the grant21 had the indirect effect of publicizing and highlighting the lack of antiretroviral drugs in public health policy, which stimulated an intensification of community mobilization to lobby government to provide antiretroviral therapy. Once the Comprehensive HIV and AIDS Care and Treatment Plan for South Africa17 was approved, funds from GFATM to KwaZulu-Natal enabled the team to implement key strategies to provide a comprehensive package of prevention, care, and support, which included infrastructure for the provision of antiretroviral therapy. As of March 2006, there are over 30000 patients undergoing antiretroviral therapy in KwaZulu-Natal.
| Acknowledgments |
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The authors thank Noddy Jinabhai, Raziya Bobat, Vindoh Gathiram, and Ann Strode, University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa; Ronald Green-Thompson, Daya Moodley, Thilo Govender, Khumbu Mtinjana, Rosemary Mthethwa, Gay Koti, Khetiwe Mfeka, Mnguni Mabuyi, Caroline Armstrong, Paul Kocheleff, Jayshree Ramdeen, and TS Makatini, Department of Health, KwaZulu-Natal, SA. They also thank field workers Zethu Gwamande (field manager), Sikhumbuza Kheswa, Philani Made, Victoria Matisilza, Nosipo Mbanjwa, Virginia Mgenga, and Marjorie Njeje.
Participants from the nongovernmental organization/ community-based organization groups were Tony Moll, Kath Defilippi, Lucky Barnabas, and Duma Shange, and from the Harvard School of Public Health were Richard Marlink and Sofia Gruskin.
Human Participant Protection
This study was approved by the research ethics committee of the University of KwaZulu-Natal.
| Footnotes |
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Contributors
R.A. Pawinski developed and conducted the research, captured and analyzed the data, and wrote the article. U.G. Lalloo supervised and contributed substantially to the research and analysis, and assisted with reviewing the article.
Accepted for publication October 9, 2005.
| References |
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11. Pawinski RA. Developing Enabling Mechanisms to Enhance a Multi-Sectoral Response to HIV/AIDS. SA-AIDS Conference; August 36, 2003; Durban, South Africa.
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15. Pawinski R. Report on the KwaZulu-Natal HIV/ AIDS Training Program, South Africa 2001/2002. Durban, South Africa: University of KwaZulu-Natal. Available at: http://www.uKwaZulu-Natal.ac.za/eciKwaZulu-Natal. Accessed March 6, 2006.
16. Lalloo U, Pawinski R, Bobat R, Moodley D, Jinabhai C, Amod F, Conway S, Friedland G. A Comprehensive HIV/AIDS Training Course to Meet the Needs of Public Sector Health Care Workers in the Province of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. XVI International AIDS Conference, July 712, 2002; Barcelona, Spain; MoPeB3234.
17. Hope for South Africaat last. Lancet. 2003; 362:501.[Medline]
18. Mbali M, Pawinski R. Report on the ECI KZN PLUS Rapid Qualitative Impact Assessment. 2004. Durban, South Africa: University of KwaZulu-Natal. Available at: http://www.ukzn.ac.za/eciukzn. Accessed March 6, 2006.
19. Gandi N, Moll A, Pawinski R, et al. Initiating and providing antiretroviral therapy for TB/HIV co-infected patients in a rural tuberculosis directly observed therapy program South Africa: the Sizonqoba study. Paper presented at: XV International AIDS Conference, July 1116, 2004. Bangkok, Thailand; MoOrB1014.
20. Pawinski R, Moll T, Gandi N, Lalloo U, Jack C, Fried-land G. Strategies and Clinical Outcomes of Integrating the Provision of Antiretroviral Therapy to TB Patients Using DOTS in High TB and HIV Prevalence Rural Settings: the Sizonqoba Study. 2nd South African AIDS Conference; 710 June, 2005; Durban, South Africa. Abstract 490.
21. Pawinski RA, Pillay S, Abdool Karim Q, et al. Utilizing Video-Conference Facilities for Wide-Spread Postgraduate Clinical HIV/AIDS Training Throughout KwaZulu-Natal. 2nd South African AIDS Conference; 710 June, 2005; Durban, South Africa. Abstract 459. 22. Baleta A. Global Fund dispute in KwaZulu-Natal. Lancet Infect Dis. 2002;2:510.[Medline]
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