Africa Health Research Institute, KwaZulu-Natal, Mtubatuba 3935, South Africa.
Department of Global Health and Infection, Brighton and Sussex Medical School, University of Sussex, Brighton BN1 9PX, UK.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021 Dec 31;19(1):434. doi: 10.3390/ijerph19010434.
In 2015, South Africa experienced one of the worst (El Niño-induced) droughts in 35 years. This affected economic activities, individual and community livelihoods and wellbeing especially in rural communities in northern KwaZulu-Natal. Drought's direct and indirect impacts on public health require urgent institutional responses, especially in South Africa's stride to eliminate HIV as a public health threat by 2030 in line with the UNAIDS goals. This paper draws on qualitative data from interviews and policy documents to discuss how the devastating effect of the 2015 drought experience in the rural Hlabisa sub-district of uMkhanyakude, a high HIV prevalence area, imposes an imperative for more proactive institutional responses to drought and other climate-related events capable of derailing progress made in South Africa's HIV/AIDS response. We found that drought had a negative impact on individual and community livelihoods and made it more difficult for people living with HIV to consistently engage with care due to economic losses from deaths of livestock, crop failure, food insecurity, time spent in search of appropriate water sources and forced relocations. It also affected government institutions and their interventions. Interviewed participants' reflections on drought-related challenges, especially those related to institutional and coordination challenges, showed that although current policy frameworks are robust, their implementation has been stalled due to complex reporting systems, and inadequate interdepartmental collaboration and information sharing. We thus argue that to address the gaps in the institutional responses, there is a need for more inclusive systems of drought-relief implementation, in which government departments, especially at the provincial and district levels, work with national institutions to better share data/information about drought-risks in order to improve preparedness and implementation of effective mitigation measures.
2015 年,南非经历了 35 年来最严重的(由厄尔尼诺现象引发的)干旱之一。这场干旱影响了经济活动、个人和社区的生计和福祉,尤其是在夸祖鲁-纳塔尔省北部的农村社区。干旱对公共卫生的直接和间接影响需要紧急的机构应对,特别是在南非按照艾滋病规划署的目标,努力在 2030 年前消除艾滋病毒这一公共卫生威胁的过程中。本文利用访谈和政策文件中的定性数据,讨论了 2015 年干旱对姆赫亚库德地区赫拉比萨分区(艾滋病毒高发地区)农村地区的破坏性影响,如何对机构应对干旱和其他与气候相关的事件提出了更积极主动的要求,这些事件有可能破坏南非艾滋病毒/艾滋病应对工作取得的进展。我们发现,干旱对个人和社区的生计造成了负面影响,使艾滋病毒感染者更难持续参与护理,因为牲畜死亡、作物歉收、粮食不安全、寻找合适水源所花费的时间以及被迫搬迁造成了经济损失。它还影响了政府机构及其干预措施。接受采访的参与者对与干旱相关的挑战,特别是与机构和协调挑战相关的挑战的反思表明,尽管目前的政策框架很稳健,但由于复杂的报告系统以及部门间合作和信息共享不足,其实施已经停滞不前。因此,我们认为,为了解决机构应对方面的差距,需要建立更具包容性的抗旱实施系统,使政府部门,特别是省级和地区级政府部门与国家机构合作,更好地共享关于干旱风险的数据/信息,以改善抗旱准备和实施有效的缓解措施。