Adeyinka Daniel A, Evans Meirion R, Ozigbu Chamberline E, van Woerden Hugo, Adeyinka Esther F, Oladimeji Olanrewaju, Aimakhu Chris, Odoh Deborah, Chamla Dick
National AIDS and STIs Control Programme, Department of Public Health, Federal Ministry of Health, Abuja, Nigeria.
Institute of Primary Care and Public Health, Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK.
Cent Eur J Public Health. 2017 Mar;25(1):55-63. doi: 10.21101/cejph.a4479.
Many sub-Saharan African countries have massively scaled-up their antiretroviral treatment (ART) programmes, but many national programmes still show large gaps in paediatric ART coverage making it challenging to reduce AIDS-related deaths among HIV-infected children. We sought to identify enablers of paediatric ART coverage in Africa by examining the relationship between paediatric ART coverage and socioeconomic parameters measured at the population level so as to accelerate reaching the 90-90-90 targets.
Ecological analyses of paediatric ART coverage and socioeconomic indicators were performed. The data were obtained from the United Nations agencies and Forum for a new World Governance reports for the 21 Global Plan priority countries in Africa with highest burden of mother-to-child HIV transmission. Spearman's correlation and median regression were utilized to explore possible enablers of paediatric ART coverage.
Factors associated with paediatric ART coverage included adult literacy (r=0.6, p=0.004), effective governance (r=0.6, p=0.003), virology testing by 2 months of age (r=0.9, p=0.001), density of healthcare workers per 10,000 population (r=0.6, p=0.007), and government expenditure on health (r=0.5, p=0.046). The paediatric ART coverage had a significant inverse relationship with the national mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) rate (r=-0.9, p<0.001) and gender inequality index (r=-0.6, p=0.006). Paediatric ART coverage had no relationship with poverty and HIV stigma indices.
Low paediatric ART coverage continues to hamper progress towards eliminating AIDS-related deaths in HIV-infected children. Achieving this requires full commitment to a broad range of socioeconomic development goals.
许多撒哈拉以南非洲国家已大规模扩大其抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)项目,但许多国家项目在儿科ART覆盖方面仍存在巨大差距,这使得降低HIV感染儿童中与艾滋病相关的死亡变得具有挑战性。我们试图通过研究儿科ART覆盖与在人群层面测量的社会经济参数之间的关系,来确定非洲儿科ART覆盖的推动因素,以便加速实现90-90-90目标。
对儿科ART覆盖和社会经济指标进行生态分析。数据来自联合国机构以及针对21个非洲全球计划优先国家的新世界治理论坛报告,这些国家母婴HIV传播负担最高。采用斯皮尔曼相关性分析和中位数回归来探索儿科ART覆盖的可能推动因素。
与儿科ART覆盖相关的因素包括成人识字率(r = 0.6,p = 0.004)、有效治理(r = 0.6,p = 0.003)、2月龄时的病毒学检测(r = 0.9,p = 0.001)、每万人口中医疗工作者的密度(r = 0.6,p = 0.007)以及政府卫生支出(r = 0.5,p = 0.046)。儿科ART覆盖与国家母婴传播(MTCT)率(r = -0.9,p < 0.001)和性别不平等指数(r = -0.6,p = 0.006)呈显著负相关。儿科ART覆盖与贫困和HIV污名指数无关。
儿科ART覆盖率低继续阻碍在消除HIV感染儿童中与艾滋病相关死亡方面取得进展。要实现这一目标,需要全面致力于一系列广泛的社会经济发展目标。