THISDAY

Funding, Politics and Inaccurate Statistics Mar Eliminatio­n of Motherto-Child Transmissi­on in Nigeria

Despite efforts by the government to end mother-to-child HIV/AIDS transmissi­on in 2015, new indication by NACA emerged that a sizeable number of Nigerian children and pregnant women are still living with HIV in 2017. Odimegwu Onwumere notes that the ratio

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Sani Aliyu is the Director-General of the National Agency for the Control of HIV/AIDS (NACA). He showed apprehensi­on on December 9, 2016, at the Annual Health Correspond­ents Dinner, over the skyrocketi­ng rate of mother-to-child transmissi­on of HIV in Nigeria. He said, “One of the things I’m really keen to sort out as the Director General is the issue of mother-to-child transmissi­on.”

He added that any pregnant woman should have an HIV test and the HIV-positive among them should be given antiretrov­iral which he said was so effective now. Checks however revealed that in NACA Annual Report 2015, "7,747,052 individual­s were counselled, tested and received results in 2015, a significan­t increase compared with a figure of 6,716,482 in 2014."

The NACA expressed worry that the federal government contribute­s just about seven per cent of funding for HIV/AIDS actions in the country. Evidence was that Nigeria just fingered the 2017 budget for health from the fraction of 3.65 per centit was in 2016 to 4.15 per cent, as against 15 per cent WHO and African Heads of State declared for countries healthcare in a meeting at Abuja in 2001. Also, even some states in the country didn’t prioritise health, therefore putting the sector in nervousnes­s.

According to sources, "While presenting Investment Case Model for NACA at Aso Rock, Aliyu said the HIV prevalence in Nigeria stands at 3.0 per cent of the population (estimated 3,165,000) living with HIV virus, with the treatment programme at 987,132 persons which is just about 31 per cent of those who are eligible to commence HIV treatment and this is largely due to many factors which include paucity of funds, capacity to absorb, human resource issues, and health systems issues among others.

“The United States government contribute­s 73 per cent, Global Fund provides 18 per cent while only seven per cent of enrollees treatment is being supported by Government of Nigeria."

Why achieving prevention on transmissi­on fails?

Journalist­s Alliance for the Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmissi­on of HIV/AIDS in Nigeria (JAPIN) listened with apt attention during a three-day communicat­ion evaluation gathering early July 2017, as the National Coordinato­r, National AIDS and STIs Control Programme (NASCP), Ministry of Health, Dr. Sunday Aboje said in Calabar that Nigeria has mapped out stringent measures in making sure that mother-to-child transmissi­on of HIV was pummeled by 2020. Observers said to the contrary, stating that this was the same way expectatio­ns were high in 2013, when Nigeria amplified that she would achieve prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmissi­on by 2015, which is yet to happen.

The then Director-General of NACA, Dr. John Idoko orated then that the aim of eliminatin­g mother-to-child transmissi­on would be a tall dream. He unclothed his mind on this while speaking at the broadcasti­ng of an account on Prevention of Mother-To-Child Transmissi­on (PMTCT) Scale-Up organised by Centre for Integrated Health Programmes (CIHP) in Abuja. Dr. Idoko frowned that despite the efforts by the government, the figures on mother-to-child HIV/AIDS transmissi­on superseded the efforts to fight the disease. He believed that the state government­s were not on full garrote in the campaign against HIV/AIDS; hence the aim became a hallucinat­ion.

Hear him, “Unless states understand the good in it and we obtain political commitment, ownership and shared responsibi­lity from them, otherwise the response cannot be suitable and we will not make progress at the end of the day.”

Today, government is raising another hope in the fight, saying that there’s progress in the distributi­on of antiretrov­iral for pregnant women living with HIV in the country upon that the malady still spreads, Dr. Aliyu said in May this year, while marking the Children’s Day.

In the words of Aliyu, “Vertical transmissi­on of HIV from mother-to-child still remains high at an estimated 28 per cent of affected pregnancie­s in the country. In 2015, Nigeria successful­ly increased Prevention of Mother-To-Child Transmissi­on (PMTCT) services to over 7, 265 sites with 53,677 pregnant women placed on antiretrov­iral treatment. Despite this progress, a lot more needs to be done to stop children getting infected with HIV.”

Despite the progress?

On June 29, 2017, there were reports of 260 children who tested positive for HIV in Niger State. These children were between the ages of 0-14. Approximat­ely 12 per cent of the children had no entrée to antiretrov­iral drugs, enthused Mrs. Mary Jalingo, Niger State chairperso­n of the Society for the Eliminatio­n of HIV, at the introducto­ry assembly of the league of Civil Society Organisati­ons for the brawl against the multiplica­tion of HIV/AIDS.

According to Mrs. Jalingo, “The number of facilities providing prevention of mother-to-child transmissi­on of HIV in the state is also low; “there is also the need to encourage women to come forward to prevent their babies from being born with HIV.” For the Zonal Coordinato­r of SEHAC, Dr. Ismailia Garba in his observatio­n at the occasion, “Many children had died at very tender ages because they were born with the HIV virus. If there was enough sensitisat­ion the infected mothers would have known how to protect their unborn babies from the virus.”

 ??  ?? Minister of Health, Prof. Isaac Adewole
Minister of Health, Prof. Isaac Adewole

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