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Mediating antiretroviral treatment for HIV during COVID-19: lessons from implementation in Gomba District, Uganda

期刊

AJAR-AFRICAN JOURNAL OF AIDS RESEARCH
卷 21, 期 2, 页码 201-206

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TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.2989/16085906.2022.2103006

关键词

people living with HIV; village health teams; community mobilisation

资金

  1. Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS)

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Initial and subsequent waves of COVID-19 disrupted the delivery of HIV care in Uganda. Stigma was identified as a central challenge, requiring nuanced adaptations for delivering antiretroviral treatment. Opportunities exist to strengthen community capacity and revive grassroots civic response systems for HIV support.
Initial and subsequent waves of COVID-19 in Uganda disrupted the delivery of HIV care. In rural areas, village health teams and organisations on the ground had to develop strategies to ensure that people living with HIV could continue their treatment. It was necessary to take evolving circumstances into account, including dealing with movement restrictions, constrained access to food and stigma due to anonymity being lost as a result of a shift from health facility-based services to community-level support. Uganda has a long history of community-driven response to HIV, although health systems and response programming have become more centralised through government and donors to address political commitments to HIV treatment and other targets. The delivery system for antiretroviral therapy was vulnerable to the impacts of COVID-19 restrictions and related circumstances. To understand the continuum of challenges, and to inform ongoing and future support of treatment for people living with HIV, interviews were conducted with HIV organisation implementers, health workers, village health team members and people living with HIV. It was found that stigma was a central challenge, which led to nuanced adaptations for delivering antiretroviral treatment. There is a need to strengthen support to households of people living with HIV through improving community capacity to manage crises through improving household food gardens and savings, as well as capacity to organise and interact with support systems such as the village health teams. In communities, there is a need to evoke dialogue on stigma and to support community leadership on pressing issues that affect communities as a whole and their vulnerable groups. There are opportunities to reawaken the grassroots civic response systems that were evident in Uganda's early response to HIV yet were lacking in the COVID-19 context.

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