Unplanned antiretroviral treatment interruptions in southern Africa: how should we be managing these?

Abstract

Adherence to antiretroviral therapy is essential for maximising individual treatment outcomes and preventing the development of drug resistance. It is, however, frequently compromised due to predictable, but adverse, scenarios in the countries most severely affected by HIV/AIDS. This paper looks at lessons from three specific crises in southern Africa: the 2008 floods in Mozambique, the ongoing political and economic crisis in Zimbabwe, and the 2007 public sector strike in South Africa. It considers how these crises impacted on the delivery of antiretroviral therapy and looks at some of the strategies employed to mitigate any adverse effects. Based on this it makes recommendations for keeping patients on treatment and limiting the development of drug resistance where treatment interruptions are inevitable. [See also the report describing this research in more detail].

Citation

Veenstra, N.; Whiteside, A.; Lalloo, D.; Gibbs, A. Unplanned antiretroviral treatment interruptions in southern Africa: how should we be managing these? Globalization and Health (2010) 6 (1) 4. [DOI: 10.1186/1744-8603-6-4]

Unplanned antiretroviral treatment interruptions in southern Africa: how should we be managing these?

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2010