A National Survey of Teachers on Antiretroviral Therapy in Malawi: Access, Retention in Therapy and Survival
Open Access
- 18 July 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Public Library of Science (PLoS) in PLOS ONE
- Vol. 2 (7), e620
- https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000620
Abstract
HIV/AIDS is having a devastating effect on the education sector in sub-Saharan Africa. A national survey was conducted in all public sector and private sector facilities in Malawi providing antiretroviral therapy (ART) to determine the uptake of ART by teachers and their outcomes while on treatment. A retrospective cohort study was carried out based on patient follow-up records from ART Registers and treatment master cards in all 138 ART clinics in Malawi; observations were censored on September 30th 2006. By this date, Malawi's 102 public sector and 36 private sector ART clinics had registered a total of 72,328 patients for treatment. Of these, 2,643 (3.7%) were teachers. Adjusting for double-registration caused by clinic transfers, it is estimated that 2,380 individual teachers had ever accessed ART. There were 15% of teachers starting ART in WHO clinical stage 1 or 2 with a CD4-lymphocyte count of ≤250/mm3 and 85% starting in stage 3 or 4. By 30th September 2006, 1,850 teachers were alive on ART (3.5% of all teachers in Malawi). The probability of being alive on ART at 6-months, 12-months, 18-months and 24-months after treatment initiation was 84%, 79%, 75% and 73% respectively. Retention in treatment was better for women (adjusted HR = 1.8) and in those starting ART in WHO Clinical Stage 1 and 2 (adjusted HR = 1.8). Rapid scale up of ART has allowed 2,380 HIV-positive teachers to access life-prolonging treatment. There is evidence that this intervention can help to mitigate some of the shortages of teaching personnel in resource-poor countries affected by a generalised HIV epidemic.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Malawi's contribution to "3 by 5": achievements and challengesBulletin of the World Health Organization, 2007
- Risk factors for high early mortality in patients on antiretroviral treatment in a rural district of MalawiAIDS, 2006
- Determinants of Mortality and Nondeath Losses from an Antiretroviral Treatment Service in South Africa: Implications for Program EvaluationClinical Infectious Diseases, 2006
- Rapid Scale-up of Antiretroviral Therapy at Primary Care Sites in ZambiaJAMA, 2006
- Scaling up of highly active antiretroviral therapy in a rural district of Malawi: an effectiveness assessmentThe Lancet, 2006
- Supervision, monitoring and evaluation of nationwide scale-up of antiretroviral therapy in MalawiBulletin of the World Health Organization, 2006
- Mortality of HIV-1-infected patients in the first year of antiretroviral therapy: comparison between low-income and high-income countriesThe Lancet, 2006
- Highly active anti‐retroviral treatment as a bridge towards education for all in sub‐Saharan AfricaInternational Social Science Journal, 2005
- Scaling up antiretroviral therapy in Africa: learning from tuberculosis control programmes--the case of Malawi.2005
- Assessment of a pilot antiretroviral drug therapy programme in Uganda: patients' response, survival, and drug resistanceThe Lancet, 2002