Male involvement in PMTCT

Similar documents
HIV and AIDS in Bangladesh

The Integrated Management of Paediatric AIDS Care and Treatment (IMPACT) Approach in Zimbabwe

Rapid Assessment of Sexual and Reproductive Health

Is it important to take counseling before testing or receiving results?

UNAIDS 2014 LESOTHO HIV EPIDEMIC PROFILE

International Service Program

Rapid Assessment of Sexual and Reproductive Health

Peer Educators Take Family Planning Messages to HIV-Positive Support Groups

Stigma and discrimination as barriers to achievement of global PMTCT and maternal health goals

Malawi Population Data Sheet

Scottish Parliament Health and Sport Committee s Inquiry into Teenage Pregnancy in Scotland Evidence from CHILDREN 1 ST

Promoting Family Planning

Annex 3 Tanzania Commission for AIDS TACAIDS. M&E Database User Manual

GARPR Online Reporting Tool

Module 4: Formulating M&E Questions and Indicators

Long Term Socio-Economic Impact of HIV/AIDS on Children and Policy Response in Thailand

Maternal and Neonatal Health in Bangladesh

hiv/aids Programme Use of Antiretroviral Drugs for Treating Pregnant Women and Preventing HIV Infection in Infants

Mother Mentor/Mother Support Group Strategy for Expansion of Peer Support for Mothers Living with HIV

Getting to zero new infections in children: what will it take? Dr Lee Fairlie 27 September2014

SITUATIONAL ANALYSIS ON HIV/AIDS IN KENYA ( Department of Adult Education ) By Janet Kawewa

HIV/AIDS AND OTHER SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED INFECTIONS 11

New York State Strategic Plan for. Elimination of Mother-to-Child Transmission of HIV

Understanding Fertility

Subject: Teenage Pregnancy in Zambia Based on the Desk Research that was conducted by Restless Development

Process Monitoring. 6 th. th Asia-Pacific UN PMTCT Task Force Meeting Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Nepal Country Team

GENDER BASED VIOLENCE AWARENESS IN THE CHURCH

HIV/AIDS AND LIFE SKILLS MONITORING TOOL ASSESSMENT REPORT

DRAFT HIV/AIDS POLICY FOR THE EDUCATION SECTOR ============================= FOREWORD

FEASIBILITY OF ROUTINE SCREENING FOR INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE IN PUBLIC HEALTH CARE SETTINGS IN KENYA

Rapid Assessment of Sexual and Reproductive Health

HIV/AIDS PAPER OUTLINE. 0.Introduction. -Definitions. 1. AIDS as a stigma. -Factors to the AIDS stigma. 2. Transmission to HIV

Delaying First Pregnancy

How To Help The Ghanian Hiv Recipe Cards

Section 6. Information, Education and Communication (IEC) Materials and Events

HIV/AIDS Tool Kit. B. HIV/AIDS Questionnaire for Health Care Providers and Staff

ORGANIZATIONS. Organization Programmatic Areas of Focus Notes Interviewed? Yes. Averting Maternal Death and Disability (AMDD)

STATEMENT THE RIGHT HONOURABLE PAKALITHA MOSISILI PRIME MINISTER OF THE KINGDOM OF LESOTHO AT THE ONTHE

cambodia Maternal, Newborn AND Child Health and Nutrition

Outpatient/Ambulatory Health Services

KENYA, COUNTY HIV SERVICE DELIVERY PROFILES

Rapid Assessment of Sexual and Reproductive Health

Vietnam Research Situation Analysis on Orphans and Other Vulnerable Children Country Brief

HPTN 073: Black MSM Open-Label PrEP Demonstration Project

Special Considerations

MATARA. Geographic location 4 ( ) Distribution of population by wealth quintiles (%), Source: DHS

Healthy Children Iniative

MINISTRY OF LABOUR AND HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT WORKPLACE POLICY HIV/AIDS JUNE 2007

Kenya National Bureau of Statistics, 2010 population census 2009 report.

MALAWI YOUTH DATA SHEET 2014

Frequently asked questions

Youth Visioning for Island Living Project proposal on HIV and AIDS in Mauritius. [Adolescent Non-Formal Education Network] PROJECT DOCUMENT

June 25, 2004 Meeting Assignment

Kenya. Demographic and Health Survey

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Summary. Accessibility and utilisation of health services in Ghana 245

EKWENDENI HOSPITAL HIV/AIDS RESOURCE CENTRE.

Presented by: Deborah Bourne C/O Hope Enterprises Ltd. 25 Burlington Ave., KGN 10, Jamaica W.I

Module 10: The Roles of Families, Community and the Health Care System in Prevention and Care for Women with Obstetric Fistula

NATIONAL MONITORING AND EVALUATION PLAN OF THE NATIONAL STRATEGIC PLAN

XVIIth International Aids Conference, Mexico City

TERMS OF REFERENCE FOR SITUATIONAL ANALYSIS OF ADOLESCENT PREGNANCY

Promoting the Sexual and Reproductive Rights and Health of Adolescents and Youth:

From Cairo to New York

Brief Overview of MIRA Channel (Women Mobile Lifeline Channel)

Post-2015 Negotiation Briefs #8: Youth Friendly Services in Universal Health Coverage

Module 2: Introduction to M&E frameworks and Describing the program

30% Opening Prayer. Introduction. About 85% of women give birth at home with untrained attendants; the number is much higher in rural areas.

guidance note 2012 KEY PROGRAMMES TO REDUCE STIGMA AND DISCRIMINATION AND INCREASE ACCESS TO JUSTICE IN NATIONAL HIV RESPONSES

Dublin Declaration. on Partnership to fight HIV/AIDS in Europe and Central Asia

117 4,904, making progress

Challenges & opportunities

Christobel Deliwe Chakwana

- % of participation - % of compliance. % trained Number of identified personnel per intervention

Improving mental health care through ehealth-grand Challenges Canada Grant

UNICEF/NYHQ /Noorani

UN AID S PROGRAM M E COORDIN AT ING BO ARD

GENDER AND DEVELOPMENT. Uganda Case Study: Increasing Access to Maternal and Child Health Services. Transforming relationships to empower communities

SYRIAN REFUGEE RESPONSE: LEBANON UPDATE ON NUTRITION

GUIDE. MENA Gender Equality Profile Status of Girls and Women in the Middle East and North Africa

Implementing Community Based Maternal Death Reviews in Sierra Leone

Couples HIV Counseling and Testing. Module Six: Providing Discordant Results

Public Knowledge and Attitudes, 2014

COUNTRY PROFILE: TANZANIA TANZANIA COMMUNITY HEALTH PROGRAMS DECEMBER 2013

CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION. Here in the Philippines, we believe in the saying of our national hero Dr.

HIV/AIDS Tool Kit. D. Answer Key for the HIV/AIDS Questionnaire for Health Care Providers and Staff

150 7,114, making progress

A REPORT CARD OF ADOLESCENTS IN ZAMBIA REPORT CARD 1

Issue Brief. Teen Pregnancy, Parenting, And Dating Violence. Links Between Teen Dating Violence and Teen Pregnancy

UNAIDS ISSUES BRIEF 2011 A NEW INVESTMENT FRAMEWORK FOR THE GLOBAL HIV RESPONSE

UNIVERSITY OF MALAWI

The relevant NICE Clinical Guidance 156, Fertility can be accessed here:

Sexual and reproductive health challenges facing young people

Guidance for Public Health Interventions for Repatriation

Risks Factors for Teenage Pregnancy and The Youth Perspective on Teenage Pregnancy and Health Needs in Nkalashane, Swaziland

BERGEN-PASSAIC TGA 2012/2013 EIIHA PLAN

Using data and tools to inform resource allocation for the HIV response. Dr. Sarah Alkenbrack & Dr. Suneeta Sharma Futures Group

Best Practices in Egypt: Mobilizing Religious Leaders. Religious Leaders showing the OBSI sign of 3-5 in Arabic

IV. Counseling Cue Cards. ICAP International Center for AIDS Care and Treatment Mailman School of Public Health Columbia University

Sample Qualitative Research Objectives

Transcription:

Male involvement in PMTCT Challenges & Opportunities for intervention in Viet Nam Presented by Nguyen Ngoc Trieu UNICEF Viet Nam at Children s Symposium, IAC Vienna 16-17 July 2010 (nntrieu@unicef.org) Acknowledgement Thank you to the study team, colleagues of the Ministry of Health of Viet Nam and health staff, women and men who involved in this study

most pregnant women with HIV in Viet Nam are diagnosed at onset of labor, reducing the opportunity for effective prevention of HIV transmission 2

Content Part 1: Access of women to PMTCT services Part 2: Key highlights of MIV Part 3: Analysis of the barriers to MIV Part 4: Plans to address the issue Part 5: Viet Nam MIV activities update 3

Part 1: Access of women to PMTCT services Prong 1: Primary prevention among women of RH age Available messages on HIV and AIDS prevention and control are very general and don t alert women to the risk of mother to child transmission Inadequate quality and coverage of VCT services Lack of client-friendly RH services and IEC/BCC for adolescents Fear of being tested for HIV related to stigma & discrimination 4

Part 1: Access of women to PMTCT services Prong 2: Prevention of unplanned pregnancy Stigmatization of women living with HIV by communities, service providers and by women living with HIV themselves Inadequate quality of care and treatment services, in particular VCT on RH, as well as low coverage Lack of IEC materials for women living with HIV Weak linkage of services and referral system 5

Part 1: Access of women to PMTCT services Prong 3: Clinical interventions for prevention of mother to child transmission Late diagnosis of HIV among pregnant women - more than half are at onsetof labor Low coverage of services (VCT not fully included in ANC services) Low health staff capacity,especially on IYCF Stigma and discrimination 6

Part 1: Access of women to PMTCT services Prong 4: Protection, care and support for mothers and infants Loss to follow up following delivery EID system has not been established Weak linkages between Ob/Gyn. and Pediatrics as well as health sector and social sector Low knowledge on IYCF among mothers living with HIV Lack of IEC materials for women living with HIV 7

Part 2: Key highlights of MIV International studies indicate that male involvement can have an important impact in increasing access to and utilization of PMTCT services Little or no information available on Viet Nam context Study undertaken to: - Examine more closely knowledge, attitudes, health seeking behavior and practices of pregnant women, their male partners and the couples and the family as a unit in respect to PMTCT - Identify behavioral and cultural determinants, barriers and opportunities for greater involvement of male partners in PMTCT and SRH - Examine existing service provision in particular how services allow, or don t allow, men/partners involvement. 8

Study Design and Methods Methods: Qualitative, FGDs and interviews Sites for data collection: 2 districts each in Quang Ninh, An Giang and Ho Chi Minh city (presents geographical, ecological, socioeconmic, culture, high prevalence of HIV but different of transmission routes (IDU, SW, border line with mobil population) 115 interviews/fgds Data collected from: Health staff (province, district and commune) Empathy Club managers Positive women and men Their family members Pregnant women and their male partners Their family members Analysis data by Nvivo software 9

Part 2: Key highlights of MIV study Key Findings and Implications for Male Involvement 1.1 Knowledge and awareness of HIV and AIDS, PMTCT and pregnancy care HIV transmission knowledge universal, but misconceptions persist PMTCT knowledge superficial, both men and women, and both PMTCT and non-pmtct sites Men know less about pregnancy-related health care, and learn about it almost entirely through their wives - large variance on wives updating their husbands 10

Part 2: Key highlights of MIV study Key Findings and Implications for Male Involvement 1.2. Attitudes towards PMTCT Men and women who are positive support condom use Men and women, positive and uninfected, DO NOT believe that positive couples should have children Going to ANC is supported--and seen as the civilized thing to do Most men and women support HIV testing during pregnancy There is acceptance of replacement feeding from men, women and family members 11

Part 2: Key highlights of MIV study Key Findings and Implications for Male Involvement 12 1.3. Health-seeking behavior and practices of pregnant women and their male partners Male partners are deeply involved in decisions about sexual health and fertility Male partners are relatively uninvolved in decisions about pregnancy care and RH Male partners do not have influence over the decision to get an HIV test, when offered as a routine test during pregnancy Most women disclose their status to their husbands right away, men may or may not No violence associated with disclosure of positive status Some men extremely supportive of positive wives although infected by their wives, others less supportive Most men and women believe that exclusive formula feeding is the only option--men quite aware of feeding practices

2. Behavioral and cultural determinants that affect male involvement Inter-spousal communication strong on most aspects, weak on sexual matters Women and men make household-level decisions jointly Everyone is expected to have a child after marriage Male partners expected to be supportive around pregnancy and childbirth Disclosure of positive status needs to be seen within a larger socioeconomic context People living with HIV still face a considerable amount of subtle discrimination Family support and influence over decision-making is mixed 13

3. Existing service delivery and male involvement 14 PMTCT services provided in very few places - in these places, overall they are of good quality Testing Routine testing works Confidentiality of results is still an issue Male partners DO NOT want to test at ANC facilities Post-test counseling strong for positive women, limited for women who test negative ARV prophylaxis a strong incentive for attractive people to receive testing and care Infant Care Formula widely recommended Breastfeeding exclusively does not appear to be known as an option Follow-up on infants appears to be weak

Part 3: Analysis of the barriers to MIV Reproductive health seen as woman s domain by men, as well as women themselves and health staff Reproductive health services not tailored to men (gender of health staff/counselors, physical layout are uncomfortable for MIV) IEC efforts target women and do not include men Men are focused on economic considerations: work and earning money Men with HIV or who felt they have risk behavior are reluctant to test and disclose HIV status to female partners 15

Part 4: Plans to address the issue There are effective actions that can be taken at each stage (prong) to promote male involvement: Prong One Promote voluntary testing and counseling among men, including partner counseling and testing Engage male counselors Public education using mass media to promote positive images about disclosing status and using condoms to prevent infection Use mass media and community awareness campaigns (through mass organizations) to raise awareness about all prongs of PMTCT Promote the benefits of disclosure by portraying positive responses 16

Part 4: Plans to address the issue Prong Two Change attitudes of health staff towards MIV through inclusion of MIV in technical and training materials Encourage women to have male partner accompany them when they attend the services Promote the benefits of disclosure by portraying positive responses Prongs Three and Four Make services more male friendly and encourage male participation Use mass media and community outreach to provide information about PMTCT Promote a policy of allowing men to attend deliveries Strengthen infant feeding and infant care counseling, emphasizing male role Address community stigma and discrimination 17

Part 5: Viet Nam MIV activities update Development of MIV plan in Viet Nam 18

Goal: To reduce the HIV transmission from HIV infected mother to their infants Objectives in the 3 selected districts: 90% husband/partner of pregnant women know about health care package for children and women (PMTCT service, nutrition and EPI, etc) and its benefit by end of 2011 ; 80% husband/partner of pregnant women access the VCT/PMTCT services by end of 2011; 80% pregnant women decide for HIV testing by end of 2011; 85% husbands/male partners of women support his wife in making an informed choice about infant feeding if HIV positive by end of 2011; 19

Intervention approach with 4 prongs General Population Male and Female at reproductive age High risk group (male & female at reproductive age) PWs & partner PWs with HIV & their partners 20

MIV Action Plan form Content Activities Responsible agencies Timeline Budget Prong 1 Prong 2 Prong 3 Prong 4 21

IEC Materials 22

23 Thank you for your attention