Boane, Mozambique—A new health clinic opened today with support from the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation will help HIV prevention and care and treatment services reach thousands more families in Mozambique.
Foundation President and CEO Pamela W. Barnes spoke at the new outpatient clinic’s inauguration on the 20th anniversary of World AIDS Day. Guests of honor included the governor of Maputo province, Mrs. Telmina Pereira, the administrator of Boane district, Cremilde de Costa Xavier, the chief medical doctor in Boane, Stelio de Mande, and the directors for Mozambique of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID).
In her remarks, Barnes highlighted the progress the Foundation has witnessed in Mozambique. She also noted the continued need to reach mothers with services to prevent the transmission of HIV to their babies, and to provide care and treatment for infected children and their families. The pandemic continues to grow in Mozambique, where currently there are more than 73,000 children living with HIV.
“Once a child is receiving treatment, it is equally important to ensure that the mother will survive to raise her child, and the family remains strong,” Barnes said in her remarks. “The best medicine you can have for any child is a healthy mother and father to take care of that child.”
The Health Center in Boane, a district referral hospital outside the capital, Maputo, previously had very little space for counseling and treatment, as well as little privacy. The Foundation has helped construct three buildings with funds from the CDC and USAID to provide the new health clinic with space for services for the prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT), care and treatment, and a children’s clinic.
“The new facilities should encourage more patients and their families to come forward for HIV testing, counseling, and treatment,” said Ellen Warming, the Foundation’s country director for Mozambique, who was also in attendance.
The Foundation began working in Boane in 2006. To date, its PMTCT program has tested 1,699 pregnant mothers in the center for HIV, and has provided medicine to prevent HIV transmission to 191 newborns. There are 1,503 patients receiving care and treatment through the center, with 415 patients receiving antiretroviral treatment (ART), 37 of whom are children, and 7 of whom are pregnant mothers. The Foundation also trains community leaders, traditional birth attendants, and religious leaders to support families and ensure they come back for livesaving medicine and support.
The clinic opening ceremony was one of many pediatric advocacy events in Mozambique around World AIDS Day to inform the population about the availability of PMTCT and care and antiretroviral treatment for children and their families. The Foundation worked with each province and a total of 12 different community-based organizations to develop a range of activities in health facilities and public venues. Activities included debates led by mothers living with HIV/AIDS, educational theater, dance, song, film, games, sports, cultural events, and donations of toys and presents for children.
The Foundation began its collaboration with the Ministry of Health in Mozambique in 2004 by providing PMTCT services, and expanded to HIV care and treatment in 2006. As of September, the Foundation has provided more than 141,000 women in Mozambique with access to critical PMTCT services. It has also enrolled more than 20,300 adults and children into care and support programs, approximately 6,500 of whom have been initiated on antiretroviral treatment, including 310 children.
In Mozambique, the Foundation’s PMTCT program is funded by USAID through the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), and its care and treatment program is funded by the The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention through PEPFAR.
Saturday, December 1, 2007
Pediatric AIDS Organization Helps Launch Boane Clinic on World AIDS Day to Prevent and Treat HIV in Children and
Posted by Hafiz Imran at Saturday, December 01, 2007
Labels: AIDS
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment