Fiji Sun

PNG’s HIV Drugs Shortage Sparks Big Warning

Any break on treatment could increase the chance of people dying

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Papua New Guineans living with HIV may die if critical anti-retroviral drugs used to treat the virus are not restocked soon, a member of the local HIV advocacy body has warned.

The amount of available drugs has fallen to low levels, and the country’s medical facilities have begun eating into what is known as its buffer stock. “Everyone who’s on treatment will be affected and people may die,” HIV patient Maura Elaripe, who is also a member of advocacy group Igat Hope, told the ABC’s Pacific Beat programme.

Ms Elaripe is one of about 44,000 people estimated to be living with HIV in PNG and sits on the board of The Global Fund, which coordinate­s donor funding to treat HIV and Tuberculos­is.

She was diagnosed with HIV in 1997, and has been receiving the therapy in some form since late 2002. The medical treatment is known as Anti-Retroviral Therapy or ART, and works by suppressin­g the “viral load” of HIV in the body, stopping person-to-person transmissi­on and preventing the virus from progressin­g to AIDS.

“We’re talking about quite a serious situation … where we are now currently eating into our three- to six-month buffer stock of antiretrov­iral treatment,” said David Bridger, the head of UNAIDS in PNG.

PNG Health Secretary Pascoe Kase said in a statement released to local media that stocks around the country were limited, but it added that the Health Department was maintainin­g close contact with donor partners to be able to have stocks delivered into the country with less than two months’ notice. The ABC made repeated attempts to clarify with the PNG Government how much stock is left in the country, when the new treatments will arrive, and whether the order has been paid for.

No interview or statement has been provided by the Health Department, Health Secretary or National AIDS Council.

Ms Elaripe said from her networks in the country, it appeared there was about one month’s worth of ART supplies left.

“For me, anti-retroviral­s are the drug that keeps me going … so I can continue living my normal life,” she said.

The 2018 budget, handed down in November, allocated 3.6 million Kina (FJ$2.26m) to HIV/AIDS treatment drugs, down from 8 million Kina (FJ$5.02m) in 2017.

The country’s HIV/AIDS programme had already been slashed to 5.1 million Kina (FJ$3.2m) allocated for 2018, from 18.2 million Kina (FJ$11.41m) in the previous budget.

For the next two years, the forecast for the programme is completely empty.

Medical organisati­ons and advocacy groups like Igat Hope estimate they need about 15 million kina (FJ$9.41m) each year to fund treatment.

“So the problem really is that we don’t have enough funds to purchase drugs,” Ms Elaripe said.

95 per cent of Pacific HIV cases are in PNG

PNG has disproport­ionately high rates of HIV for the region, with about 95 per cent of the entire HIV cases in the Pacific. In 2016, AIDSrelate­d illnesses killed 1100 people. UNAIDS says about 22,000 people are currently receiving ART, but The Global Fund says it’s closer to 24,000 people.

The risks of ART stopping include drug resistance, viral rebound, increased risk of HIV transmissi­on, and a reduction of the amount of infection-stopping white blood cells in the system.

We’re talking about quite a serious situation … where we are now currently eating into our three- to six-month buffer stock of anti-retroviral treatment. David Bridger Head of UNAIDS in PNG

 ??  ?? A nurse helps move a patient dying of HIV-AIDS in Port Moresby.
A nurse helps move a patient dying of HIV-AIDS in Port Moresby.

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