The Citizen (KZN)

Despair of ARV patients

WITHOUT ANTIRETROV­IRALS, FUTURE PROSPECTS ARE BLEAK Department of health says situation should stabilise by mid-November.

- Brian Sokutu – brians@citizen.co.za

Amid the anxiety caused by the widespread shortage of antiretrov­iral (ARVs) drugs, which has affected scores of South Africans living with HIV/Aids in the past three months, the national department of health yesterday reassured patients that the situation should fully stabilise by mid-November.

But for Mampho Skosana and Mantombaza­na Dludla of Gauteng, the department’s reassuranc­e holds little weight.

Skosana, who has been taking ARVs for the past 10 years, was recently turned away by nurses at the Nokuthela Ngwenya Community Health Centre in Ekurhuleni due to the drugs being out of stock at the clinic.

For her, weeks of waiting for the drugs have turned into despair and she said she could “not afford to wait any longer”.

“Nurses said there was nothing they could do,” said Skosana.

Dludla, who has been living with the disease for the past 17 years, said the department’s mid-November may as well be an admission of defeat, “because by then so many people, including myself, would have died”.

For three months, Dludla has been visiting a Tsakane clinic near Brakpan, “but the situation has turned out for the worst”.

“The clinic usually gave me a three-month stock of drugs and I would normally return to top up closer to the time,” she said.

“The last time I visited the clinic, my ARV supply was scaled down to 18 days, which is not acceptable. I have been told by nurses that the clinic has run out of stock.

“The situation is so bad, especially if you have to regularly travel by taxi. It’s a situation that has resulted in several people being fired because of non-disclosure to employers.”

Dludla said public health staff in most clinics in the country were “frustrated because they cannot explain the situation to patients”.

She added: “What has angered us is that the department, despite having foreseen this situation, has failed to communicat­e properly with staff and patients. The Gauteng health MEC should have notified people timeously and made arrangemen­ts with private clinics.

“The consequenc­es are dire for us without the treatment. The treatment may not work in our system anymore, leading to kidney and liver failure.”

Health department spokespers­on Popo Maja explained the department’s ARV challenge, saying: “With regard to abacavir and lamivudine, the stock has arrived and is being released in tranches.

“Based on the supply plan provided by the contracted supplier, the supply should normalise by mid-November. We noted that the Stop Stockouts Project (SSP) has been providing guidance on alternativ­e agents. However, these options are not feasible since there are insufficie­nt volumes of stock of alternativ­e agents, given the large volumes required by the public sector. The alternativ­e agents, like stavudine, may not have the safety and efficacy of recommende­d regimens.

“The SSP and the South African HIV Clinicians’ Society (SAHCS) have indicated that they have received requests for assistance.

“The requests were never channelled to the national department of health to intervene. The clinical guidelines said to be developed by SAHCS are not currently on their website.”

Maja said the active ingredient­s for most medicines are produced mainly in India and China.

“New legislatio­n in China relating to industrial pollution, has resulted in the closure of manufactur­ing sites for the production of Lamivudine and Abacavir.

“Consequent­ly, this has affected the production of these two ARVs and has impacted on medicine availabili­ty globally, including South Africa.”

I can’t afford to wait any longer

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa