Publication | Closed Access
Integrating Prevention of Mother-to-Child HIV Transmission Into Routine Antenatal Care
73
Citations
28
References
2005
Year
Family MedicineMaternity ServiceFamily PlanningHealth WorkersMaternal ImmunizationContraceptionHiv/aids CounsellingFree HivClinical EpidemiologyPrenatal CareObstetricsPublic HealthSexual And Reproductive HealthPregnancy PreventionMaternal ComplicationMaternal HealthMaternal Health PolicyHivMidwiferyAids PathogenesisSexual HealthTreatment And PreventionGlobal HealthPediatricsPregnant WomenMedicine
With funds from Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation, the Cameroon Baptist Convention Health Board implemented a program to prevent mother-to-child transmission of HIV-1 (PMTCT) as part of its routine antenatal care, with single-dose maternal and infant peripartum nevirapine (NVP) prophylaxis of HIV-positive mothers and their babies. Nurses, midwives, nurse aides, and trained birth attendants counseled pregnant women, obtained risk factor data, and offered free HIV testing with same-day results. From February 2000 through December 2004, this program rapidly expanded to 115 facilities in 6 of Cameroon's 10 provinces, not only to large hospitals but to remote health centers staffed by trained birth attendants. We trained 690 health workers in PMTCT and counseled 68,635 women, 91.9% of whom accepted HIV testing. Of 63,094 women tested, 8.7% were HIV-1-positive. Independent risk factors for HIV-1 infection included young age at first sexual intercourse, multiple sex partners, and positive syphilis serology (P < 0.001 for each). We counseled 98.7% of positive and negative mothers on a posttest basis. Of 5550 HIV-positive mothers, we counseled 5433 (97.9%) on single-dose NVP prophylaxis. Consistent training and programmatic support contributed to rapid upscaling and high uptake and counseling rates.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1