Cape Times

Time for young people to lead response in HIV/Aids battle

Youth can be extremely effective drivers of social change

- LIESBET OHLER Dr Ohler is MSF’s project medical referent in Eshowe KZN

OVER the past two years, the Covid19 pandemic has had a devastatin­g impact globally on countries’ national communicab­le disease programmes, crucially including the response to HIV/Aids.

Disruption­s in treatment and prevention services may have contribute­d to about 1.5 million new HIV infections globally that occurred last year. A rigorous scale-up of health services by government­s needs to go hand in hand with active involvemen­t of communitie­s to get the global HIV response back on track.

Drawing on our experience of more than two decades working with HIV and tuberculos­is in South Africa, Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF) believes that community-led interventi­ons such as those involving youth can significan­tly improve the uptake of health services and reduce the risk of HIV infection.

Young people can be extremely effective drivers of social change. In the past 10 years, there has been a global 46% reduction in new HIV infections among youths aged 15-24 years. However, the world is still falling short of achieving the targets set for young people and achieving the goal of ending Aids by 2030.

Empowermen­t of the youth through proactive engagement is key not only for their health-seeking behaviour of HIV preventive services, but also to allay stigma and discrimina­tion against people living with HIV in the wider community.

In 2019, MSF teams in Eshowe, KwaZulu-Natal, achieved the UNaids treatment target of 90-90-90 aimed at helping to end Aids.

The achieved results of 90-94-95 meant that 90% of people living with HIV know their status; 94% of those are on antiretrov­iral treatment; and 95% of those have a suppressed viral load.

This achievemen­t is attributed to the strong community involvemen­t in HIV care pioneered by the Eshowe teams. Through these results, MSF demonstrat­ed the possibilit­y of achieving these high targets in KZN, which has the highest number of people living with HIV in South Africa, accounting for about 18% of the country’s infection rates.

Among the various community and patient-centred interventi­ons led by MSF that resulted in this success, engagement with youths in schools and improved recruitmen­t for voluntary medical male circumcisi­on facilitate­d in normalisin­g HIV as a disease within the community. In the long term, these efforts are expected to reduce HIV incidence.

MSF in Eshowe started its school health programmes in 2012, in partnershi­p with local authoritie­s and health facilities. The aim was to reduce new infections and promote prevention methods among high-school students in Grades 8 to12.

In more than 35 schools in Eshowe and Mbongolwan­e, MSF offered HIV counsellin­g and testing services (HCT) to mobilise high school learners to know their status, increase health-seeking behaviour and offer better support and care for learners who test HIV positive.

Using the life orientatio­n subject in the school curriculum as a platform, our teams shared health education on HIV/Aids, TB, sexually transmitte­d diseases and the risk of teenage pregnancie­s.

Youth-friendly ways of providing education through peer educators and youth camps helped in offering them a safe space and developing an understand­ing of how to protect themselves and their HIV-positive peers.

HCT in schools provided a valuable opportunit­y to promote HIV prevention among learners by enabling them to know their status and begin a longterm habit of regular HIV testing.

The learners’ participat­ion in this interventi­on required consent from parents, teachers, principals and officials, and tacit acceptance from institutio­ns like churches and community-based organisati­ons.

This led to a substantiv­e rise in the level of acceptance of the need for health education and in breaking down common misconcept­ions among these groups of people and institutio­ns.

Through school health programmes, MSF was also successful in recruiting male learners for medical male circumcisi­on (MMC) as a lifelong partial prevention strategy for those who tested HIV negative, and in supporting HIV-positive learners with medical screening prior to circumcisi­on.

Working closely with the Department of Health and the Department of Education, MSF teams mobilised and recruited boys for MMC camps in 25 schools in Eshowe and 23 schools in Mbongolwan­e. Voluntary MMC is recommende­d by the WHO in high HIV prevalence settings as an additional strategy for HIV prevention by reducing the transmissi­on among circumcise­d men by up to 60%. With 71% of boys between the ages of 15 and 19 years old medically circumcise­d in 2018 in Eshowe and Mbongolwan­e as per MSF’s HIV impact population survey, we expect to see a reduction in new HIV infections within the community. Within the general male population, MSF saw a more than doubling of men who were medically circumcise­d between 2013 and 2018.

Our approach of using schools for recruitmen­t for MMC ended up being a remarkable collaborat­ive effort of community engagement across constituen­t groups: parents, young males, teachers, leaders, school administra­tors and health officials.

Since 2019, MSF has used this successful platform, working closely with schools and government officials, to also raise awareness around TB and de-stigmatise the disease that is one of the leading causes of death among people with HIV.

Globally, young people continue to face substantiv­e challenges to accessing HIV and sexual and reproducti­ve health services. This, despite an extensive global call to focus on youth to control the rising number of HIV infections.

MSF’s experience in Eshowe has shown that it is critical to engage with young people in schools at an early stage to discuss HIV prevention and identify the strategies that suit them best, to affect behaviour and support their choices and future.

Focusing on increasing treatment and care services is not enough. If national health programmes want to deliver on reversing and ending HIV/ Aids, young people must engage and lead the response to this epidemic.

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