Scaling up HIV viral load monitoring in Manicaland, Zimbabwe: challenges and opportunities from the field
Methods: A retrospective data review of routine reports from MSF-supported health facilities in Manicaland Province (Zimbabwe) was conducted. These secondary aggregate data were triangulated, and emerging themes of lessons learnt from VL monitoring were shared.
Results: A VL testing coverage of 63% (5966/9456) was achieved among the 40 health facilities, together with a switch rate to second-line antiretroviral therapy (ART) of 46.4% (108/233). The key enablers to scaling-up the VL monitoring were well-equipped and supported VL laboratories, the operationalisation of the on-the-job clinical mentoring and systematic weaning off of better performing health facilities. Concerted efforts from different implementing partners and funders in the HIV programme, and close collaboration with MoHCC were pivotal.
Conclusion: Our experience indicates that clinical mentoring is effective, and resulted in high VL testing coverage and up-skilling primary health care workers in VL monitoring. Attention must be focused on innovations for improving VL result utilisation, especially the identification and management of patients who fail ART.
Keywords: HIV treatment cascade; HIV viral load; VL monitoring scale-up; clinical mentoring; dried blood spot; low-resource settings; partner collaboration
Document Type: Research Article
Affiliations: 1: Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), Mutare, Zimbabwe 2: MSF, Harare, Zimbabwe 3: Ministry of Health and Child Care, Zimbabwe 4: MSF, Southern Africa Medical Unit, Cape Town, South Africa
Publication date: 21 December 2019
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