Food Security

Tuesday, March 28, 2006

ZAMBIA : Food programme help HIV/AIDS patients

from Relief web, March 27, 2006

Scattered wheelbarrows litter the ground outside Kanyama Health Center's anti-retroviral clinic in Lusaka, Zambia.

Just beyond them, a long line of patients has formed, each waiting to see the sister-in-charge, as the head nurse is called.

For years, the wheelbarrows were used by young men and women to wheel sick relatives to the clinic for HIV testing and whatever treatment was available. The crude "wheelchairs" symbolized the hopelessness and poverty that HIV brought to many households in southern Africa.

Today, the wheelbarrows have new significance. More and more Zambians - who were previously too ill too walk - return to the clinic each month to refill their anti-retroviral (ARV) drug prescriptions.

Now strong, and walking under their own power, patients use the wheelbarrows that once carried them to cart away bags of maize provided through a unique partnership among several organizations - the local health district, the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP), Zambia's Catholic dioceses, and two U.S.-based non-governmental organizations, Catholic Relief Services and Project Concern International.

The free food is essential for many ARV patients, nurses said. Patients taking ARVs risk malnutrition and harmful side effects unless they can increase their overall caloric intake by as much as 40 percent. Many Aids patients in Zambia have difficulty getting enough food to tolerate the highly-toxic drugs.

Poor rains have increased food insecurity in many parts of the country, which worries organizations providing anti-retrovirals and home-based care. The World Food Programme warned last November that more than 1.6 million Zambians will need food assistance in the coming months.

"For someone to be taking medication every day, it's a challenge," Project Concern consultant Shampulula Kabamba said. She currently trains and supports home-based care volunteers in Mongu, the capital of Western Province, Zambia's poorest region, where food insecurity is a huge obstacle to successful ARV therapy. The volunteers monitor patients as they begin their treatment, as missed pills can lead to the virus becoming resistant to the drugs.

Kabamba said that when Zambia's government announced in August that it would provide free anti-retroviral drugs to all Zambians who need them, it provoked a flood of clients to HIV testing centers, many of whom were placed on the ARV therapy.

The home-based care and food distribution programs, ultimately funded by the WFP and the U.S. President's Emergency Plan for Aids Relief (Pepfar), fill the gap to ensure that even the poorest Zambians can get the food they need to tolerate treatment.

From her base in Mongu, Kabamba's 26 HIV-positive volunteers look after 440 people receiving ARV therapy. Through a home assessment, they've determined that 343 clients -- 78 percent -- need food rations to combat side effects and comply with their treatment schedule.

Nationwide, the WFP will provide food to 20,000 people on ARV therapy in the coming months, said WFP spokesperson Jo Woods by e-mail. About 40,000 people are receiving ARVs in Zambia, but the government hopes to scale up the program to offer treatment to the estimated 200,000 Zambians who need it.

But even free ARVs and free food programs do not guarantee a smooth ride for sick Zambians receiving treatment.

Kabamba said transport costs are a significant obstacle to ARV adherence for the majority of Zambians who live far from the nearest treatment clinics. Kabamba said nurses will sometimes take up collections to help rural patients who have exhausted all their resources by getting to the clinic and are stuck without money to catch a minibus home.

Transport and adherence are especially a problem for HIV-positive children, who often have an elderly grandparent traveling to the clinic each month to fill their prescriptions. Some grandparents are too sick themselves, or too poor, to make the trip - or they simply forget, Kabamba said.

U.S. and Zambian government officials, as well as representatives of non-governmental organizations, said they are looking at transport as the next hurdle to conquer in the national ARV rollout.

Still, adherence to the life-saving treatment in Mongu is over 95 percent, Kabamba said, and rates are similarly high in Lusaka, the capital of Zambia.

Members of an HIV-positive support group at Kamwala clinic in Lusaka said many of their friends and neighbors are still suspicious of ARVs' efficacy in treating Aids. But they urged an end to the rumours and skepticism.

"We don't want any people to die and leave kids behind, so we think they should take ARVs so they can see their kids growing up," said Leyford Hanangala, who has lived with the virus for almost 20 years. Hanangala said he regularly sought treatment from traditional healers, which never worked.

In fact, just one member of the Kamwala support group, Mary Chapo, said she had never sought help from traditional healers. When Chapo found out she was HIV-positive, she asked her parents to take her to a hospice to die.

Today, Chapo says she is living positively with the virus, and her children even remind her to take her ARVs at the same time every day.

"We want people to know that ARVs work and you can go back to life," she said.

Source : Relief Web

Monday, March 27, 2006

PATAM: Scaling up Access to Antiretorival Therapy

By Jabulani Sithole, Zimbabwe

"We Need Food and Drugs"

Harare, Zimbabwe- "We need food and drugs," * has emerged as the message the world should get loud and clear from People living with HIV and AIDS from the ongoing Harare, Pan African Treatment Access Movement (PATAM)conference.

Speaking during a session on 'Understanding Antiretroviral (ARV) therapy'led by Francoise Louis a Technical Advisor on ARVs with Medicins Sans Frontieres (MSFE) (Doctors without borders) a united voice of AIDS activists noted that good nutrition and drugs are critical components in the fight against HIV and AIDS.

Louis' presentation explored in detail how ARV therapy has reduced a death sentence of HIV infection to a simple chronic illness. Reducing stigma and discrimination associated with the virus.

ARV therapy although expensive is available and it has changed lives of many, bringing hope for life. It helps reduce the viral levels in the body through reducing the reproduction of the virus in the body. It also helps to repair the damaged immune system of the body.

It emerged in the discussion that a successful treatment plan has to be holistic in nature and incorporates issues of nutrition. Nutrition is important to help the body rebuild and repair the cells damaged by the virus. Eating well nutritious food helps the body fight any disease.

Nutrition on its own cannot cure AIDS but it is important to reinforce treatment for opportunistic infections and ARV therapy.

Both nutrition and antiretroviral therapy are integral in the fight against the virus and they need to be provided together not one or the other.

Louis is working in the region on a number of initiatives to roll out ARVs to the public and to educate health workers in the handling of these complex drugs. She is scheduled to visit Zimbabwe in August on a mission to help MSFE in their ARV roll out plan.

Source: Pronut-hiv eForum

AIDS Requires Food Security - S.G

by Jane Kagara & William Rutaremara, The New Times (Kigali), March 5, 2006

KIGALI-- The secretary general in the Ministry of Health, Dr. Ben Karenzi, has urged relevant authorities to provide good nutrition and food security to victims of gender-based violence living with HIV/Aids.

He was responding to findings of a recent research carried out by an official from African Rights, Elizabeth Rugege, during a campaign dubbed: "Sixteen days of activism".

According to her findings, "for a large number of women living with HIV/Aids in Rwanda, the burden of the disease is made worse by the lack of adequate nutrition and healthcare. Taking drugs with no balanced diet or without food weakens the Aids patients,making them eventually leave their jobs, while others stop taking the drugs."

These findings were presented during a meeting held March 3 at Hotel Novotel Umubano, Kigali. It was attended by officials from the government and donor community.

While discussing the findings, Karenzi said, "Gender-based violence makes the victim traumatised. It can prevent a woman from being a full participant in her family, community and in the process of national development."

He called on the public and policy makers to strengthen laws against gender-based violence. He proposed that any person who intentionally transmits Aids to his or her unaffected spouse should be penalised.

The research was carried out around the former provinces of Butare, Gitarama and Kigali city.

Its target group includes people on anti-retroviral drugs. A sample of 45 women was taken from patients at Butare Hospital while five men were from Kicukiro Health Centre, Kigali city.Others interviewed are Lucie Ntiyitegeka and Laetittia Umutoni in Kigoma, Gitarama.

One of the participants, Dr Mpfizi from Kicukiro Health Centre, said: "The centre used to provide food to pregnant women who tested HIV positive, but that supply was cut off as the rate of pregnancy increased beyond our capacity."

The participants agreed that humanitarian organisations and other stakeholders should address the problem of poverty and food security among people living with Aids. They were also encouraged to sensitise women especially at grass roots level to engage in income-generating activities.

Source: Pronut-HIV eForum

Uganda: Poverty Hinders HIV/ Aids Fight in Masaka

Sadab Kitatta Kaaya, The Monitor (Kampala), March 22, 2006

Masaka--Adminstration of anti-retroviral drugs is facing a setback because patients lack enough food, the medical superintendent of Masaka Hospital has said.

Dr Nathan Kenya Mugisha said ARVs enhance a patient's appetite and many patients on the drug lack the capacity to get enough food.

"Many of our patients are poor. They don't have the means to get enough food. In turn, some of them end up giving up the drug," Mugisha said on March 15.

This was during a function at which 53 patients on ARVs received bicycles from the Aids Health Care Foundation (AHCF) at the Uganda Cares Clinic at Masaka Hospital.

According to WWW. health24.com, people living with HIV need a well-balanced diet because it slows down the onset of HIV to Aids and improves the patient's quality of life.

"Our development partners need to come in and help us assist these people to supplement their diet. This is the only way we shall achieve our goal because the patients are threatening to give up on getting treatment," he said.

Last year, the LC5 Chairman for Rakai district, Mr Vincent Semakula Settuba, told journalists that people living with HIV/Aids in the district were giving up the drug because of the high appetite for food the drug causes.

He said due to the long drought that hit the district, food production was low yet the demand was high.

Mugisha expressed worries about the low number of children on ARV treatment.

"Only 11 per cent of the patients on ARV treatment are children. This number is below the targeted 15 per cent," he said. The AHCF Africa Bureau Chief, Dr Bernard Okong, said the enrolment of ARV patients at the clinic had increased from 50 in 2001 to over 2,400 patients today.

The AHCF Vice President, Mr Peter Reis, said his organisation would facilitate over 500 people living with HIV/Aids with bicycles to ease their transport to the clinic for treatment.

He urged them to mobilise more patients for free ARV treatment.

Source: Pronut-HIV eForum

Zambia: Food Program Helps More Get Benefits of HIV Treatment

March 24, 2006 by, Margaret McElligott

Lusaka, Zambia--Scattered wheelbarrows litter the ground outside Kanyama Health Center's anti-retroviral clinic in Lusaka, Zambia. Just beyond them, a long line of patients has formed, each waiting to see the sister-in-charge, as the head nurse is called.

For years, the wheelbarrows were used by young men and women to wheel sick relatives to the clinic for HIV testing and whatever treatment was available. The crude "wheelchairs" symbolized the hopelessness and poverty that HIV brought to many households in southern Africa.

Today, the wheelbarrows have new significance. More and more Zambians - who were previously too ill too walk - return to the clinic each month to refill their anti-retroviral (ARV) drug prescriptions.

Now strong, and walking under their own power, patients use the wheelbarrows that once carried them to cart away bags of maize provided through a unique partnership among several organizations - the local health district, the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP), Zambia's Catholic dioceses, and two U.S.-based non-governmental organizations, Catholic Relief Services and Project Concern International.

The free food is essential for many ARV patients, nurses said. Patients taking ARVs risk malnutrition and harmful side effects unless they can increase their overall caloric intake by as much as 40 percent. Many Aids patients in Zambia have difficulty getting enough food to tolerate the highly-toxic drugs.

Poor rains have increased food insecurity in many parts of the country, which worries organizations providing anti-retrovirals and home-based care. The World Food Programme warned last November that more than 1.6 million Zambians will need food assistance in the coming months.

"For someone to be taking medication every day, it's a challenge,"

Project Concern consultant Shampulula Kabamba said. She currently trains and supports home-based care volunteers in Mongu, the capital of Western Province, Zambia's poorest region, where food insecurity is a huge obstacle to successful ARV therapy. The volunteers monitor patients as they begin their treatment, as missed pills can lead to the virus becoming resistant to the drugs.

Kabamba said that when Zambia's government announced in August that it would provide free anti-retroviral drugs to all Zambians who need them, it provoked a flood of clients to HIV testing centers, many of whom were placed on the ARV therapy.

The home-based care and food distribution programs, ultimately funded by the WFP and the U.S. President's Emergency Plan for Aids Relief (Pepfar), fill the gap to ensure that even the poorest Zambians can get the food they need to tolerate treatment.

From her base in Mongu, Kabamba's 26 HIV-positive volunteers look after 440 people receiving ARV therapy. Through a home assessment, they've determined that 343 clients -- 78 percent -- need food rations to combat side effects and comply with their treatment schedule.

Nationwide, the WFP will provide food to 20,000 people on ARV therapy in the coming months, said WFP spokesperson Jo Woods by e-mail. About 40,000 people are receiving ARVs in Zambia, but the government hopes to scale up the program to offer treatment to the estimated 200,000 Zambians who need it.

But even free ARVs and free food programs do not guarantee a smooth ride for sick Zambians receiving treatment.

Kabamba said transport costs are a significant obstacle to ARV adherence for the majority of Zambians who live far from the nearest treatment clinics. Kabamba said nurses will sometimes take up collections to help rural patients who have exhausted all their resources by getting to the clinic and are stuck without money to catch a minibus home.

Transport and adherence are especially a problem for HIV-positive children, who often have an elderly grandparent traveling to the clinic each month to fill their prescriptions. Some grandparents are too sick themselves, or too poor, to make the trip - or they simply forget, Kabamba said.

U.S. and Zambian government officials, as well as representatives of non-governmental organizations, said they are looking at transport as the next hurdle to conquer in the national ARV rollout.

Still, adherence to the life-saving treatment in Mongu is over 95 percent, Kabamba said, and rates are similarly high in Lusaka, the capital of Zambia.

Members of an HIV-positive support group at Kamwala clinic in Lusaka said many of their friends and neighbors are still suspicious of ARVs' efficacy in treating Aids. But they urged an end to the rumours and skepticism.

"We don't want any people to die and leave kids behind, so we think they should take ARVs so they can see their kids growing up," said Leyford Hanangala, who has lived with the virus for almost 20 years.

Hanangala said he regularly sought treatment from traditional healers, which never worked.

In fact, just one member of the Kamwala support group, Mary Chapo, said she had never sought help from traditional healers. When Chapo found out she was HIV-positive, she asked her parents to take her to a hospice to die.

Today, Chapo says she is living positively with the virus, and her children even remind her to take her ARVs at the same time every day.

"We want people to know that ARVs work and you can go back to life," she said.

Source: Allafrica.com