Pregnant women's access to PMTCT and ART services in South Africa and implications for universal antiretroviral treatment.

We describe pregnant womens' access to PMTCT and HAART services and associated birth outcomes in South Africa.Women recuperating in postnatal wards of a referral hospital participated in an evaluation during February-May 2010 during which their maternity records were examined to describe their...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Akthar Hussain, Dhayendre Moodley, Sudhindra Naidoo, Tonya M Esterhuizen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3230616?pdf=render
id doaj-d914a0151187403e86d458de1a05e994
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d914a0151187403e86d458de1a05e9942020-11-25T01:34:35ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-01612e2790710.1371/journal.pone.0027907Pregnant women's access to PMTCT and ART services in South Africa and implications for universal antiretroviral treatment.Akthar HussainDhayendre MoodleySudhindra NaidooTonya M EsterhuizenWe describe pregnant womens' access to PMTCT and HAART services and associated birth outcomes in South Africa.Women recuperating in postnatal wards of a referral hospital participated in an evaluation during February-May 2010 during which their maternity records were examined to describe their access to VCT, CD4 Counts, dual ART or HAART during pregnancy.Of the 1609 women who participated in this evaluation, 39% (95%CI36.7-41.5%) tested HIV-positive during their pregnancy. Of the HIV-positive women 2.9% did not have a CD4 count done and an additional 31.3% did not receive their CD4 results. The majority (96.8%) of the HIV-positive women commenced dual ART at their first antenatal visit independent of their CD4 result. During February-May 2010, 48.0% of the women who had a CD4 result were eligible for HAART (CD4<200 cells/mm(3)) and 29.1% of these initiated HAART during pregnancy. Under the current South African PMTCT guidelines 71.1% (95%CI66.4-75.4%) of HIV positive pregnant women could be eligible for HAART (CD4<350 cells/mm(3)). There were significantly more preterm births among HIV-positive women (p = 0.01) and women who received HAART were no more at risk of preterm deliveries (AOR 0.73;95%CI0.39-1.36;p = 0.2) as compared to women who received dual ART. Nine (2.4%; 95%CI1.1-4.5%) HIV exposed infants were confirmed HIV infected at birth. The in-utero transmission rate was highest among women who required HAART but did not initiate treatment (8.5%) compared to 2.7% and 0.4% among women who received HAART and women who were not eligible for HAART and received PMTCT prophylaxis respectively.In this urban South African community the antenatal HIV prevalence remains high (39%) and timeous access to CD4 results during pregnancy is limited. Under the current South African guidelines, and assuming that access to CD4 results has improved, more than 70% of HIV-positive pregnant women in this community would be requiring HAART.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3230616?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Akthar Hussain
Dhayendre Moodley
Sudhindra Naidoo
Tonya M Esterhuizen
spellingShingle Akthar Hussain
Dhayendre Moodley
Sudhindra Naidoo
Tonya M Esterhuizen
Pregnant women's access to PMTCT and ART services in South Africa and implications for universal antiretroviral treatment.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Akthar Hussain
Dhayendre Moodley
Sudhindra Naidoo
Tonya M Esterhuizen
author_sort Akthar Hussain
title Pregnant women's access to PMTCT and ART services in South Africa and implications for universal antiretroviral treatment.
title_short Pregnant women's access to PMTCT and ART services in South Africa and implications for universal antiretroviral treatment.
title_full Pregnant women's access to PMTCT and ART services in South Africa and implications for universal antiretroviral treatment.
title_fullStr Pregnant women's access to PMTCT and ART services in South Africa and implications for universal antiretroviral treatment.
title_full_unstemmed Pregnant women's access to PMTCT and ART services in South Africa and implications for universal antiretroviral treatment.
title_sort pregnant women's access to pmtct and art services in south africa and implications for universal antiretroviral treatment.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-01-01
description We describe pregnant womens' access to PMTCT and HAART services and associated birth outcomes in South Africa.Women recuperating in postnatal wards of a referral hospital participated in an evaluation during February-May 2010 during which their maternity records were examined to describe their access to VCT, CD4 Counts, dual ART or HAART during pregnancy.Of the 1609 women who participated in this evaluation, 39% (95%CI36.7-41.5%) tested HIV-positive during their pregnancy. Of the HIV-positive women 2.9% did not have a CD4 count done and an additional 31.3% did not receive their CD4 results. The majority (96.8%) of the HIV-positive women commenced dual ART at their first antenatal visit independent of their CD4 result. During February-May 2010, 48.0% of the women who had a CD4 result were eligible for HAART (CD4<200 cells/mm(3)) and 29.1% of these initiated HAART during pregnancy. Under the current South African PMTCT guidelines 71.1% (95%CI66.4-75.4%) of HIV positive pregnant women could be eligible for HAART (CD4<350 cells/mm(3)). There were significantly more preterm births among HIV-positive women (p = 0.01) and women who received HAART were no more at risk of preterm deliveries (AOR 0.73;95%CI0.39-1.36;p = 0.2) as compared to women who received dual ART. Nine (2.4%; 95%CI1.1-4.5%) HIV exposed infants were confirmed HIV infected at birth. The in-utero transmission rate was highest among women who required HAART but did not initiate treatment (8.5%) compared to 2.7% and 0.4% among women who received HAART and women who were not eligible for HAART and received PMTCT prophylaxis respectively.In this urban South African community the antenatal HIV prevalence remains high (39%) and timeous access to CD4 results during pregnancy is limited. Under the current South African guidelines, and assuming that access to CD4 results has improved, more than 70% of HIV-positive pregnant women in this community would be requiring HAART.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3230616?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT aktharhussain pregnantwomensaccesstopmtctandartservicesinsouthafricaandimplicationsforuniversalantiretroviraltreatment
AT dhayendremoodley pregnantwomensaccesstopmtctandartservicesinsouthafricaandimplicationsforuniversalantiretroviraltreatment
AT sudhindranaidoo pregnantwomensaccesstopmtctandartservicesinsouthafricaandimplicationsforuniversalantiretroviraltreatment
AT tonyamesterhuizen pregnantwomensaccesstopmtctandartservicesinsouthafricaandimplicationsforuniversalantiretroviraltreatment
_version_ 1725071043067904000