Sunday, November 4, 2012

The Paeditric AIDS Corps: responding to the African HIV/AIDS health

The Paeditric AIDS Corps: responding to the African HIV/AIDS health professional resource crisis.

Health professional capacity for delivery of HIV care and treatment is severely constrained across sub-Saharan Africa. African health professional expertise in paediatrics is in particularly short supply. Here Kline et al describe a Paediatric AIDS Corps program that was designed to place paediatricians and other physicians in Africa on a long-term basis to expand existing health professional capacity for paediatric and family HIV care and treatment. In the first 2 years of this program, 76 physicians were placed in 5 African countries that have been hit hard by AIDS. Enrolment of HIV-infected children in care more than quadrupled over a 24-month period, to 26 590. The authors believe that this pilot program can serve as a model for larger-scale efforts to immediately expand access for African children and families to life-saving HIV care and treatment.

Editors’ notes: With health professional capacity for delivering HIV treatment and care severely constrained across sub-Saharan Africa, attention has turned to task-shifting to other health cadres, task-sharing which involves parts of procedures or tasks being taken on by different health care providers, recruiting and retaining new health caregivers, and hosting short-term volunteer projects. This programme, responding to the fact that children are underrepresented among patients on antiretroviral treatment in virtually every setting in sub-Saharan Africa, mobilised US graduates of residency training programmes in paediatrics, family medicine, and internal medicine for assignments of a year or longer in Botswana, Lesotho, Swaziland, Malawi, and Burkina Faso. They receive a living stipend, full benefits, a housing allowance, and student loan debt relief. The programme plans its own obsolescence by training local health professionals. Its success in improving paediatric treatment coverage while being locally acceptable will be of interest to many worldwide who would like to contribute in some way to improve the dire situation of the vast majority of the 2 million children living with HIV in Africa.

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