Food Security

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

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