THISDAY

FG: Pregnant Women, Children Still Have Limited Access to HIV Treatment

- Onyebuchi Ezigbo

The federal government has said despite achievemen­ts made in response to HIV epidemic in the past few years, key population segments like pregnant women, children as well as those in closed custodial settings are sadly lagging behind because of limited access to high quality disease prevention and treatment services.

Minister of Health, Dr. Osagie Ehanire who disclosed this at an event to mark this year's World HIV-AIDS Day in Abuja, yesterday, however noted that the country was moving close to achieving the UNAIDS target of 95-95-95 per cent on access to HIV prevention, treatment and care services.

He said that notable effort had gone this year, into expanding access to HIV testing and treatment service for pregnant women, through the national Prevention of Mother to Child Transmissi­on of HIV (PMTCT) scale up which aimed to increase the number of service delivery points from 6,000 to 40,000 locations through the “Test All, Treat All, Report All’ strategy.

Ehanire said it was important to keep up current momentum so that government could continue to work with partners to address barriers arising from various circumstan­ces, that still impede progress.

"In the regard, providing HID/ AIDS services to reach, test and treat HIV positive pregnant women, children, key population­s and partners, as well as those in closed custodial settings, is sadly lagging behind, because of limited access to high quality disease prevention and treatment services," he said.

The minister assured that government would continue to seek programs and ways to facilitate access for this segment of the people.

"We are also particular­ly committed to ending AIDS in children, who mostly became infected with HIV in the process of being born by mothers who are HIV positive and often did not know it.

“These children would have been spared the infection had their mothers been tested while they were pregnant with the children and the HIV positive ones put in treatment that would have protected them from transmissi­on of infection from mother to child," he said.

Ehanire further said Nigeria has joined the Global Alliance to end AIDS in Children by 2030, an alliance of currently 12 countries who resolved to take concerted actions for results and mutual accountabi­lity.

He added that in order to address the gaps in diagnosing, treating and retaining children and adolescent­s in HIV care, the ministry, "will prioritise the four pillars of the alliance: testing, treatment and care for children, adolescent­s and pregnant and breastfeed­ing women living with HIV; eliminatin­g vertical transmissi­on, and addressing gender equality and the social and structural barriers that hinder access to services."

On his part, the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) Mr. Boss Mustapha said despite heartwarmi­ng achievemen­ts recorded by the country, HIV still remains an unfinished business because of barriers that pose threat to ending AIDS by 2030 if not tackled headlong.

"I therefore urge everyone gathered here to do all that is necessary to ensure equal access to HIV prevention, treatment, care and support services devoid of stigma for children, adolescent and key population­s who have been left behind," he said.

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