women and hiv: challenges and opportunities - kenya

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Women and HIV: Challenges and Opportunities - Kenya Dr. Jemima Kamano Associate Program Manager, AMPATH Lecturer and Consultant Physician, Moi University School of Medicine and Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital www.ampathkenya.org

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Women and HIV: Challenges and Opportunities - Kenya. Dr. Jemima Kamano Associate Program Manager, AMPATH Lecturer and Consultant Physician, Moi University School of Medicine and Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital www.ampathkenya.org. Map of Kenya. Kenyan Statistics - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Women and HIV: Challenges and Opportunities - Kenya

Women and HIV: Challenges and Opportunities - Kenya

Dr. Jemima KamanoAssociate Program Manager, AMPATH

Lecturer and Consultant Physician, Moi University School of Medicine and Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital

www.ampathkenya.org

Page 2: Women and HIV: Challenges and Opportunities - Kenya

Map of KenyaKenyan Statistics•Country population: 44,351,000 people•Women population: 50.11%•Life expectancy: 61 years•GDP per capita is US $1800, i.e. 82% lower than the world’s average. Population below poverty line: 45.9%•Prevalence of HIV: 5.6% •Prevalence of HIV in women: 6.9%•Prevalence of HIV in men: 4.4%

Page 3: Women and HIV: Challenges and Opportunities - Kenya

AMPATH• Academia and

Government partnership

• Started in 2001 in response to HIV

• Restructured in 2009 to address population health

• Currently taking care of 60,000 HIV positive patients, of whom 68% are women

Page 4: Women and HIV: Challenges and Opportunities - Kenya

Gladys• Married to a philandering husband at age

of 21• Not employed and no special skills• Husband, sole breadwinner, denied her

permission to ever take a HIV test• Diagnosed HIV positive at ANC – 4th child• Disclosed status, beaten and abandoned

by husband, family and in-laws• No income, 4 children, and expected to

attend clinic, exclusively breastfeed, and eat healthy

• Worst fear through all of this was: “what if my children are also infected?”

Gladys giving a talk in one of the motivational sessions to patients in the psychosocial support group.

Gladys at her workstation at AMPATH.

Page 5: Women and HIV: Challenges and Opportunities - Kenya

Jane• Jane, 45 years old.• HIV positive on ART for the last 15 years.• Widowed at 29 years, and raised her 4 children

alone.• First born daughter got an early pregnancy

from the sex for fish trade at age 12.• Jane recently had a minor stroke and was then

diagnosed hypertensive – treatment unaffordable.

• Jane has never had a pap smear, yet her two sisters have both been diagnosed with cervical cancer. She has lived in fear of any kind of screening.

• Recently regained hope after joining a support and GISE group and now able to afford hypertension care since its integration in CCC.

Page 6: Women and HIV: Challenges and Opportunities - Kenya

Esther• Esther: 18 year old orphan.• Born with HIV and started ARVs as a child.• Grew up with step family, endured lots of

abuse about having been promiscuous like her mother.

• Due to the abuse, lost hope early and had very poor adherence in early teenage years – failed first line.

• Now in college, on second line, biggest challenge: disclosure to peers, dating with HIV.

• Her words: “I do fear what will happen when my second line finally fails, so I do all in my power to keep it working. But when the time comes, I know AMPATH will find a way for me, you already kept me for 18 years, and now am full of life and have so much to live for.”

Page 7: Women and HIV: Challenges and Opportunities - Kenya

Challenges• Women socio-economically and culturally disempowered and more

stigmatized.• Limited access to healthcare: Health systems underfunded, static

and geared to diseases rather than populations.• Limited access to capital, skills: Silo programs at national level and

in healthcare• Little community involvement in funding and in planning.

• Continued risky sexual behavior among especially younger women with continued spread and low access to screening.

• Without community screening, higher rates of MTCT in community despite falling rates in hospitals.

• HIV mortality rates still high, and resistance rates increasing.• Aging population with HIV hence increased NCDs that are now

contributing immensely to the health burden but remain unaddressed.

Page 8: Women and HIV: Challenges and Opportunities - Kenya

Opportunities • Population health approach: Find, Link, Treat and

Retain (FLTR): Early case and risk finding and intervention = control.

• Integrated care task shifted/shared to the lowest primary care level; Care package that’s community centered.

• LACE (Legal Aid Centre of Eldoret).• Population health supported by Zuri Health

Insurance and AMPATH coordinated microfinance groups.

Page 9: Women and HIV: Challenges and Opportunities - Kenya

Expected outcomes from microfinance groups

• Group caring for themselves– Improved linkage; target > 80%– Retention in care; target > 95%– Improved drug compliance/adherence– Improved quality of life– Cost reductions – patients & program

• Economic gains for the group from activities

OVERALL: Reduction in community VL & HIV incidence --– HIV pandemic control

Page 10: Women and HIV: Challenges and Opportunities - Kenya
Page 11: Women and HIV: Challenges and Opportunities - Kenya
Page 12: Women and HIV: Challenges and Opportunities - Kenya
Page 13: Women and HIV: Challenges and Opportunities - Kenya

MembershipFamily Preservation Initiative

• Total of over 10,000 members ever enrolled in GISE

• 83.33% female members

• 75.01% attendance rate to group meetings

• 98.8% retention rate

• 13.3% average membership growth rate

Page 14: Women and HIV: Challenges and Opportunities - Kenya

Conclusion

• Era of HAART may have brought new hope, but deeper socio-economic and systems issues still need to be solved.

• Funding ≠ Access ≠ Utilization• Nothing can put women down forever, they

always will bounce back and stronger.• Investing in women, the only way to ensure

population health.

Page 15: Women and HIV: Challenges and Opportunities - Kenya

Acknowledgements• PEPFAR and USAID• Abbott• AbbVie• Eli Lilly and Company• Grand Challenges Canada• AMPATH Consortium• Kenya MOH• The great people of Western Kenya

Page 16: Women and HIV: Challenges and Opportunities - Kenya

Thank you