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Charles Kiyaga National EID Coordinator Ministry of Health – Uganda ckiyaga@gmail.com

Challenges to identifying HIV-exposed infants, scaling up early infant diagnosis & linkage to prophylaxis, treatment and care programs . Charles Kiyaga National EID Coordinator Ministry of Health – Uganda ckiyaga@gmail.com.

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Charles Kiyaga National EID Coordinator Ministry of Health – Uganda ckiyaga@gmail.com

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  1. Challenges to identifying HIV-exposed infants, scaling up early infant diagnosis & linkage to prophylaxis, treatment and care programs Charles Kiyaga National EID Coordinator Ministry of Health – Uganda ckiyaga@gmail.com

  2. Following infants throughout entire EID process highlights key challenges in the entire EID Cascade 1 2 3 4

  3. Different factors contribute to the Challenges in the EID process 2 3 4 1 Potential causes of loss

  4. EID review revealed that only 40% (98 of 244) of tested infants were eventually enrolled into care & treatment Infant Retention Continuum at 3 Regional Referral Hospitals Sept 2007 – Feb 2009 39% of positive infants never received results 35% of positive infants receiving results were never enrolled into care 42% of positive infants in care & treatment were lost

  5. Drivers of Loss: Not capturing exposed infants 2 3 4 1 • Limited sensitization and awareness among HCWs • Healthcare workers not proactively identifying and referring exposed infants • Lack of a formal referral system for EID testing from ‘entry points’ within health facility and off facility • Exposed infants referred from different wards/clinics for on-site DBS testing are not reaching the testing point • Lack of referral or sample collection from the community (immunization outreaches) • Lack of referral system for exposed infants identified before or at birth • HIV+ pregnant women identified at ANC or maternity not bringing infants for DBS testing at 6 weeks Exposed infants never tested

  6. Referral from PMTCT: Data from one hospital revealed that over 80% of HIV+ pregnant women never brought their babies back for testing and care after delivery Linkage between PMTCT and EID Hospital, Jan – Dec 2008 Less than 20% of PMTCT mothers could be linked to tested infants Strong, formalized PMTCT-EID linkages are needed to capture exposed infants before birth

  7. Drivers of Loss: Exposed infants not receiving results and completing testing algorithm 1 2 3 4 • Sub-optimal clinic flow with multiple follow-up points • Caregivers unclear where to return for results • EID services with insufficient space and staffing • Poor documentation and tracking systems • Key information not kept in single comprehensive longitudinal register— one must sift through many registers and charts • Lack of an appointment system to trigger follow-up • Lack of consistent counseling and care provision • Weak counseling on importance of test results, testing algorithm, and the need for regular care • Lack of care provision undermines importance of infants returning regularly • Long sample and result turnaround times 39% of positive infants never receive results

  8. Clinic Systems: At Namayumba Health Center IV there was no centralized follow-up and care point Legend Patients Results Samples JCRC Lab (Kampala) • Impact of Centralizing EID Services only in the Lab • Caregivers of infants tested at ANC or ART Clinic do not know where to return for results and follow-up • Caregivers of infants tested at the lab in OPD receive no counseling or sensitization during sample collection • With all results given in the lab, there is no post-result counseling or care unless caregiver takes initiative to seek it out • No set appt for 2nd PCR • No formal referral to ART Clinic if positive Posta Uganda Posta Uganda DBS Samples Test Results Courier from Wakiso Town Courier to Wakiso Town Laboratory in OPD DBS Samples DBS Samples ANC/PMTCT ART Clinic OPD Lower Level HCs Immunization Immunization Outreaches

  9. Turnaround Time: Long sample and result turnaround time had an adverse effect on whether caregivers receive results or not Average Time between DBS Collection and Caregiver Receiving Results Jinja RRH, Jan 2008 – Feb 2009 Caregiver Receives Results Sample Drawn Dispatched to JCRC Arrives at JCRC Sample Tested Result sent from JCRC Result arrives at Facility 4 Days Average (n= 333) 4 Days Average (n= 203) 30 Days Average (n= 222) 31 Days Average (n= 194) On average, caregivers had to wait 69 days to received DBS results

  10. Turnaround Time & Retention: Fewer caregivers receive their results with longer turnaround times, but even in best case percent returning remained low # Days between Sample Collection and Result Arrival at Site

  11. Drivers of Loss: HIV-positive infants not being enrolled into care and treatment 1 2 3 4 • No formal referral system to ART clinics • Infants referred from EID testing point to ART Clinic are only told to go verbally with no tracking by either EID or ART units • Limited integration or communication between EID testing and ART clinic • No meetings between EID & ART teams to follow-up referred infants 35% of pos infants receiving results were never enrolled

  12. Drivers of Loss: HIV-positive infants not initiated & retained in care after enrollment at ART Clinic 1 2 3 4 • Not immediately initiating eligible infants on ART • Only 45% of eligible HIV+ infants initiated on ART! • Some HCWs not aware of current EIT Policy, and others are reluctant to initiate infants immediately —failure to initiate ART decreases odds of survival • Late identification and testing of exposed infants • 40% of infants tested over 6 months of age, so health likely to have already deteriorated • Failure to provide specialized care for exposed infants before results return • Many exposed infants receive specialized care only once confirmed positive 42% of positive infants in care & treatment were lost

  13. Age and Attrition: 59% of infants were captured at greater than 3 months of age 16-18 Months (7%) 13-15 Months (11%) 10-12 Months (10%) 7-9 Months (13%) 4-6 Months (18%) 0-3 Months (41%) Capture and diagnosis of infants at a late age can lead to attrition after initiation on treatment due to rapid disease progression

  14. Having seen the above challenges we undertook to strengthen our EID system, with a package of 6 complementary interventions

  15. Assessment of the pilot at several facilities showed high impact across all key areas of EID: EID program has also implemented other high-impact innovations: Increases access and identification Reduces sample-result TAT

  16. Challenges exist , but “EID system strengthening” model has demonstrated high impact & shown feasibility of implementation The strengthening model has shown the value and feasibility of changing EID from merely a testing service to a longitudinal comprehensive care package for all HIV-exposed infants Acknowledgements • CDC Uganda for their financial and program support. They also supported my coming here • CHAI for their technical and logistical support • JCRC for doing most of the lab testing • PEPFAR for their financial support • UNICEF for their financial support

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