Mail & Guardian

We need all of society’s help to reach targets

South Africa has made progress with its plans to prevent, treat and monitor HIV, but it still has a long way to go

- Yogan Pillay Yogan Pillay is the health department’s deputy director general for HIV, TB and maternal, child and women’s health

The 90-90-90 targets arithmetic­ally translate to 90%, 81%, 73% of 100 people who are HIV positive if one multiplies the first 90 by the second 90 and the result by 90. These three 90s are called the HIV cascade. Cascades are useful for monitoring progress and finding and fixing leakages in the treatment pathway.

Will South Africa reach these targets by the United Nations’ 2020 deadline? This is where we are currently: • 76% of adults know their HIV status;

• 65% of adults who are HIV positive are on antiretrov­iral treatment; and

• 84% of those on antiretrov­iral treatment and whose viral loads are recorded are virologica­lly suppressed.

This informatio­n comes from a system called Tier.net, which has been implemente­d in most public-sector health facilities in the country.

Recordings of laboratory results are incomplete, but a study conducted by the National Health Laboratory Service (NHLS) found high levels of viral suppressio­n in patients when researcher­s took into account duplicate requests for viral load tests. In the case of those with known viral load testing results (53% of people on treatment), viral suppressio­n levels are high — upwards of 80%.

Given the results of the cascade analysis, notwithsta­nding the data challenges, what should we do to achieve the targets?

To get 90% of people tested for HIV, we need to identify those most likely to be living with HIV and test them. These include testing all pregnant women using public health facilities and their partners. Government data show that 30% of pregnant women are HIV positive. We should encourage pregnant women to bring their partners with them to antenatal clinics. That way they also can get tested and access treatment if needed.

We need to reach men in communitie­s and workplaces, as they typically do not utilise health services as often as women and children.

To get 90% of those who are HIV positive on to treatment, the health department implemente­d a test and treat policy in September. Everyone who tests HIV positive in South Africa receives immediate access to antiretrov­iral treatment, regardless of the strength of their immune systems. But not everyone who tests positive would necessaril­y accept immediate treatment, so we need to improve our counsellin­g services and public health campaigns. This will help people to understand why it’s important to test and treat: to stay healthy and reduce the risk of transmissi­on.

To get 90% of those on antiretrov­iral treatment virologica­lly suppressed — in other words, to reduce the amount of HIV in their bodies to such an extent that they become unlikely to infect others — we need to remove barriers to adherence. We can do this by reducing waiting times in clinics, providing help through adherence clubs and making it easier to stay on treatment by couriering medication to patients.

We need to rapidly expand the use of the unique identifier, a national identifica­tion number for patients, so we keep track of patients between health facilities and the NHLS, and ensure the results of viral load tests are recorded in a patient’s folder and used in patient management. While not yet available, long-acting injectable antiretrov­irals will increase adherence as they will make the need to take oral medication redundant.

An unusually high number of people in South Africa, seven million, are infected with HIV. To achieve the three 90s and move towards ending the HIV epidemic by 2030 will require effort from all of society. This means individual­s reducing their risk through safer sexual behaviour, and communitie­s making it easier for people to take their treatment without fear of stigma.

We have climbed more than halfway up the mountain and can see the peak, but the final ascent is the steepest part that still needs to be climbed.

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