Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, School of Public Health, College of Health Sciences, University of Ghana, P O Box LG 13, Accra, Ghana.
Int J Equity Health. 2012 Oct 16;11:62. doi: 10.1186/1475-9276-11-62.
The global scale-up of antiretroviral therapy (ART) for HIV patients has led to concerns regarding inequities in utilization of ART services in resource-limited contexts. In this paper, we describe regional and sex differentials in the distribution of ART among adult HIV patients in Ghana. We highlight the need for interventions to address the gender-based and geographic inequities related to the utilization of ART services in Ghana.
We reviewed National AIDS/STIs Control Program's ART service provision records from January 2003 through December 2010, extracting data on adults aged 15+ who initiated ART in Ghana over a period of eight years. Data on the number of patients on treatment, year of enrollment, sex, and region were obtained and compared.
The number of HIV patients receiving ART in Ghana increased more than 200-fold from 197 in 2003, to over 45,000 in 2010. However, for each of six continuous years (2005-2010) males comprised approximately one-third of adults newly enrolled on ART. As ART coverage has expanded in Ghana, the proportion of males receiving ART declined from 41.7% in 2004 to 30.1% in 2008 and to 27.6% in 2010. Also, there is disproportionate regional ART utilization across the country. Some regions report ART enrollment lower than their percent share of number of HIV infected persons in the country.
Attention to the comparatively fewer males initiating ART, as well as disproportionate regional ART utilization is urgently needed. All forms of gender-based inequities in relation to HIV care must be addressed in order for Ghana to realize successful outcomes at the population level. Policy makers in Ghana and elsewhere need to understand how gender-based health inequities in relation to HIV care affect both men and women and begin to design appropriate interventions.
抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)在全球范围内推广应用于 HIV 患者,这引发了人们对资源有限环境下 ART 服务利用方面存在不平等现象的关注。本文描述了加纳成年 HIV 患者接受 ART 治疗的地区和性别差异。我们强调需要采取干预措施,以解决与加纳 ART 服务利用相关的基于性别的和地域不平等问题。
我们查阅了 2003 年 1 月至 2010 年 12 月期间国家艾滋病/性传播感染控制规划的 ART 服务提供记录,提取了在加纳接受 ART 治疗的 15 岁及以上成年人的数据,研究持续了八年。获取并比较了治疗人数、登记年份、性别和地区的数据。
在加纳,接受 ART 治疗的 HIV 患者人数从 2003 年的 197 人增加到 2010 年的 45000 多人,增长了 200 多倍。然而,在连续六年(2005-2010 年)中,男性约占新登记接受 ART 治疗的成年人的三分之一。随着加纳 ART 覆盖范围的扩大,男性接受 ART 的比例从 2004 年的 41.7%下降到 2008 年的 30.1%,再到 2010 年的 27.6%。此外,全国 ART 利用存在不均衡的地区差异。一些地区报告的 ART 登记人数低于其在全国 HIV 感染者人数中所占的比例。
迫切需要关注新开始接受 ART 治疗的男性人数较少以及 ART 利用的地区不均衡问题。为了使加纳在人群层面实现成功的结果,必须解决与 HIV 护理相关的各种基于性别的不平等问题。加纳和其他地方的政策制定者需要了解与 HIV 护理相关的基于性别的健康不平等现象如何影响男女双方,并开始设计适当的干预措施。