Gilks Charles F, Crowley Siobhan, Ekpini René, Gove Sandy, Perriens Jos, Souteyrand Yves, Sutherland Don, Vitoria Marco, Guerma Teguest, De Cock Kevin
Department of HIV/AIDS, World Health Organization, Geneva 1211, Switzerland.
Lancet. 2006 Aug 5;368(9534):505-10. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(06)69158-7.
WHO has proposed a public-health approach to antiretroviral therapy (ART) to enable scaling-up access to treatment for HIV-positive people in developing countries, recognising that the western model of specialist physician management and advanced laboratory monitoring is not feasible in resource-poor settings. In this approach, standardised simplified treatment protocols and decentralised service delivery enable treatment to be delivered to large numbers of HIV-positive adults and children through the public and private sector. Simplified tools and approaches to clinical decision-making, centred on the "four Ss"--when to: start drug treatment; substitute for toxicity; switch after treatment failure; and stop--enable lower level health-care workers to deliver care. Simple limited formularies have driven large-scale production of fixed-dose combinations for first-line treatment for adults and lowered prices, but to ensure access to ART in the poorest countries, the care and drugs should be given free at point of service delivery. Population-based surveillance for acquired and transmitted resistance is needed to address concerns that switching regimens on the basis of clinical criteria for failure alone could lead to widespread emergence of drug-resistant virus strains. The integrated management of adult or childhood illness (IMAI/IMCI) facilitates decentralised implementation that is integrated within existing health systems. Simplified operational guidelines, tools, and training materials enable clinical teams in primary-care and second-level facilities to deliver HIV prevention, HIV care, and ART, and to use a standardised patient-tracking system.
世界卫生组织提出了一种抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)的公共卫生方法,以使发展中国家的艾滋病毒阳性患者能够扩大获得治疗的机会,认识到西方由专科医生管理和先进实验室监测的模式在资源匮乏地区不可行。在这种方法中,标准化的简化治疗方案和分散的服务提供方式使大量艾滋病毒阳性的成人和儿童能够通过公共和私营部门获得治疗。以“四个S”为核心的简化临床决策工具和方法——何时:开始药物治疗;因毒性换药;治疗失败后换药;以及停药——使较低级别的医护人员能够提供护理。简单有限的药品配方推动了成人一线治疗固定剂量组合的大规模生产并降低了价格,但为确保最贫穷国家能够获得抗逆转录病毒疗法,护理和药物应在服务点免费提供。需要对获得性和传播性耐药性进行基于人群的监测,以解决仅根据临床失败标准换药可能导致耐药病毒株广泛出现的担忧。成人或儿童疾病综合管理(IMAI/IMCI)有助于在现有卫生系统内进行分散实施。简化的操作指南、工具和培训材料使初级保健和二级医疗机构的临床团队能够提供艾滋病毒预防、艾滋病毒护理和抗逆转录病毒疗法,并使用标准化的患者跟踪系统。