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South African Health Review 2008

Series Name: 
South African Health Review
Published by: 
Health Systems Trust

The theme of this 13th edition of the Review, launched in December 2008, is Primary Health Care in South Africa: A review of 30 years since Alma Ata. The SAHR 2008 chapters focus on critical issues in Primary Health Care. The Review includes a national and international perspective of Primary Health Care, and focuses on areas such as policy and legislation, determinants of health, lifestyle, infectious diseases, mental health, maternal and child health, nutrition and environmental health. The SAHR reviews issues around human resources, finance, and information. It also looks at research on health systems, the role of the private and non-governmental organisations in Primary Health Care, and ends with the relevant health and related indicators chapter.

Full SAHR 2008 [pdf 10.5MB]

Foreword [pdf 833Kb]
Contents and Acknowledgements [pdf 460Kb]
Editorial [pdf 509Kb]

Primary Health Care: In Context
1 International Perspective on Primary Health Care Over the Past 30 Years [pdf 599Kb]
2 A Perspective on Primary Health Care in South Africa [pdf 570Kb]
3 Health Legislation and Policy [pdf 616Kb]
4 Determinants of Health and their Trends [pdf 311Kb]

Primary Health Care: Programme Areas
5 Chronic Non-Communicable Diseases [pdf 637Kb]
6 STIs, HIV and AIDS and TB: Progress and Challenges [pdf 624Kb]
7 Community Access to Mental Health Services: Lessons and Recommendations [pdf 541Kb]
8 Maternal, Newborn and Child Health: 30 Years On [pdf 595Kb]
9 Nutrition: A Primary Health Care Perspective [pdf 668Kb]
10 Developments in Environmental Health [pdf 1.32Mb]

Primary Health Care: Systems Support
11 Strengthening Human Resources for Primary Health Care [pdf 676Kb]
12 Primary Health Care Financing in the Public Sector [pdf 614Kb]
13 Information for Primary Health Care [pdf 629Kb]
14 A Review of Health Research in South Africa from 1994 to 2007 [pdf 600Kb]
15 The Role of Private and Other Non-Governmental Organisations in Primary Health Care [pdf 590Kb]

Indicators
16 Health and Related Indicators [pdf 5.88Mb]

Glossary [pdf 62Kb]
Index [pdf 60Kb]

Risk factors for HIV vary between African cities, need tailored responses

A comparative study in three large cities in southern Africa has found big differences in risk factors for acquisition of HIV infection, emphasising the importance of locally tailored HIV prevention strategies and up-to-date information on local risk factors.

The study looked at behavioural risk factors associated with acquiring HIV infection in 5000 sexually active women in Harare, Durban and Johannesburg who took part in a large trial of an HIV prevention method based on use of the diaphgram.

Sue Napierala Mavedsnege and colleagues report the findings of their prospective cohort analysis in the advance online edition of the Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes. 

A total of 309 incident HIV infections were identified. Durban reported the highest incidence rate, followed by Johannesburg and then Harare (6.75 per 100 person years, 95% CI: 5.74-7.93; 3.33 per 100 person years, 95% CI: 2.51-4.44; 2.72 per 100 person years CI: 2.26-3.26, respectively).

Having more than one partner in the last three months was the only common factor associated with HIV incidence.

The majority of the estimated 35 million people living with HIV live in sub-Saharan Africa where 70% of all new infections occur. Women represent over 60% of all infections. Southern Africa, with the highest regional prevalence, reflects different phases of the epidemic.

In Zimbabwe, with an estimated prevalence of 14.3%, the epidemic began early, peaked in 1998 with a subsequent decline in incidence and prevalence.

From 1990-1998 South Africa had an exponential increase followed by a moderate increase until 2004 when apparent stabilisation began. In 2008 estimated provincial prevalence rates ranged from 5.3% to 25.8%.

In Gauteng province, with Johannesburg its largest city, prevalence appears to have peaked in 2002 at 20.3% and declined to 15.2% in 2008. In contrast, Kwa Zulu Natal province where Durban is the largest city, estimated prevalence rose from 15.7% in 2002 to 25.8% in 2008.

While cross-sectional studies looking at risk factors associated with HIV have taken place in Zimbabwe and South Africa, few have looked at risk factors for HIV incidence in women.  A better understanding of these factors within local contexts will help develop targeted interventions so reducing transmission.

The authors looked at factors associated with differences of HIV incidence among women in Harare, Johannesburg and Durban enrolled between September 2003 and September 2005 in the Methods for Improvement of Reproductive Health (MIRA) study, a randomised clinical trial to look at the effect of the diaphragm plus lubricant gel for the prevention of HIV. The intervention did not reduce HIV incidence.

The authors undertook a prospective cohort analysis of trial participants who were followed for a median of 21 months (12-24 months).

Socio-demographic, biological and behavioural data were collected at baseline and at quarterly visits. Testing for HIV and STIs were conducted at each quarterly visit.

Each location had distinct characteristics as well as different patterns of individual risk factors.

In Harare women were more likely to live with their partner, be employed and not use alcohol or drugs but more likely to wipe inside their vagina. While they had a later sexual debut and fewer partners than in Durban or Johannesburg there was more transactional sex (for money, food, drugs or shelter) within the last three months.

Early sexual debut was more common in Durban, while in Johannesburg consumption of alcohol within the last three months, multiple sexual partners and sex under the influence of drugs or alcohol were more likely.

Sexually transmitted infections (STIs) were important risk factors in Harare and Durban (prevalent herpes simplex virus AHR=2.56, 95% C: 1.61-4.06; incident herpes simplex virus AHR= 12.6, 95% CI: 2.13-21.87; gonorrhoea AHR=6.82, 95% CI: 2.13-21.87 and prevalent herpes simplex AHR=1.64, 95% CI: 1.07-2.52; gonorrhoea AHR=4.40, 95% I: 2.07-9.39, respectively.

Multiple partners and sex with a partner under the influence of alcohol or drugs significant increased the risk in Durban (AOR=1.78, 95% CI: 1.11-2.85 and AOR= 1.51, 95% CI: 1.05-2.16, respectively, whereas in Johannesburg early sexual debut was a strong predictors of getting HIV(AOR= 2.60, 95% CI: 1.30-5.17).

In Harare and Johannesburg 20.2 % and 22.3% of HIV infections, respectively, were attributable to wiping inside the vagina. Wiping inside the vagina has been independently associated with decreased condom use

In Harare over 96% of women were living with their partner; the median number of lifetime partners was 1.3. This implies, note the authors, most HIV infection was acquired from their live-in partner, yet 25% did not know their partner’s status.

The authors note the strengths of the study include its longitudinal study design and large sample size.

A limitation is that the study was conducted among clinical trial participants with strict eligibility criteria.

The authors suggest “as an epidemic matures more transmission occurs within stable partnerships, and we may see this...in South Africa. As the epidemic wanes, as… in Zimbabwe, we may begin to see…HIV transmission among young people and high risk core groups become increasingly important drivers of the epidemic.”

The significant differences in drivers of HIV incidence in the three locations support targeted HIV programming based on the local situation and epidemiology as the most effective approach to reduce HIV incidence among women, the authors conclude.

Reference

Napierala Mavedzenge S et al. Determinants of differential HIV incidence among women in three southern African locations. JAIDS advance online edition, doi: 10.1097/QAI.0b013e3182254038, 2011.

Older ARVs associated with premature ageing

NAIROBI, 27 June 2011 (PlusNews) - Certain antiretroviral (ARV) drugs commonly used in the developing world may be responsible for premature ageing, according to the authors of a new study published in the journal, Nature Genetics. Newer, less toxic but more expensive ARVs are more commonly used in the Western world.

Nucleoside analogue reverse-transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) - including Zidovudine, Lamivudine and Abacavir - have enabled millions of people living with HIV to prolong their lives. The UN World Health Organization has recommended that countries phase out Stavudine, an NRTI commonly used in Africa, due to long-term, irreversible side effects.

"We noticed that people in their 40s who had been on NRTIs for the past several years had signatures of ageing in their muscles commonly found in healthy people in their 70s and 80s," said Prof Patrick Chinnery of the University of Newcastle in the UK, one of the study's lead authors.

The researchers studied skeletal muscle from 33 HIV-infected adults, all aged 50 years or under, and 10 uninfected control subjects of comparable age. They found that in patients on NRTI treatment there was an expansion in mutations of mitochondrial DNA - the energy-producing part of the cell - similar to the mutations found in healthy older individuals.

"What we saw in our study is similar to patterns described by people who have been on ART [antiretroviral therapy] for a long time," said Chinnery.

Studies have found that despite a significant drop in mortality, people living with HIV are often affected by an increased risk of non-AIDS complications, including osteoporosis and heart attacks, which undermine their life-expectancy.

"The findings suggest that we need to look carefully at the effects of these drugs because some of the diseases caused by the abnormalities - diabetes, heart failure and so on - are serious and can cause progressive disability," Chinnery noted.

"But at the same time, clearly the patients need their drugs in order to keep them alive... but our study suggests that it may be beneficial to move to newer classes of drugs."

Chinnery said there was a need to conduct prospective studies on the likely effects of long-term use of different ARVs in order to catch and address potentially harmful side effects.

Medical abortion

Series Name: 
Nursing Update
Published by: 
Democratic Nursing Organisation of South Africa

South Africa currently only provides for medical abortion in the private sector – however, the National Department of Health is finalising guidelines for implementation in the public sector. Given the demand for abortion services by women, the limited accessibility of surgical abortion there is a need to make medical abortion services available. This should address illegalmedical abortion providers currently advertising on lamppostsin public areas and the concerning maternal mortality rates.

Aids is a human rights issue

Series Name: 
Nursing Update
Published by: 
Democratic Nursing Organisation of South Africa
Marion Stevens, Women and HIV/AIDS Gauge, Health Systems Trust, shares initiatives in the pipeline to make Aids testing safer.

Do you remember Beijing and Cairo?

Series Name: 
Nursing Update
Published by: 
Democratic Nursing Organisation of South Africa

In March, at the United Nations in New York this year, the Commission on the Status of Women marked the 15th anniversary of the Beijing Platform for Action. There was a short political declaration adopted on the second day of the Commission, which reaffirmed the commitments made at Beijing and called for actions towards implementation. There were 7 resolutions introduced:
1. HIV and AIDS, Women and the Girl Child
2. Women’s Economic Empowerment
3. Eliminating Maternal Mortality and Morbidity through the Empowerment of Women
4. Ending Female Genital Mutilation
5. Release of women and children taken hostage
6. The situation of and assistance to Palestinian women
7. Strengthening institutional arrangement of the UN for support of gender equality and the empowerment of women by consolidating the four existing offices into a composite entity [Gender Equality Architecture Reform]

An Overview of Health and Health care in South Africa 1994 2010: Priorities, Progress and Prospects for New Gains

Published by: 
Department of Health (South Africa)

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
This paper describes progress and challenges in efforts to improve the health of South Africans since 1994. It reviews the state of health and the health care system, identifies major accomplishments and shortcomings, and outlines some opportunities for new gains in national health priorities. The purpose of the paper is to help inform discussion of macro health policy and planning by identifying key riorities and opportunities for consideration.

Although restructuring of the public health sector post-1994 achieved substantial improvements in terms of access, rationalisation of health management and more equitable health expenditure, fifteen years later these early gains have been eroded by a greatly increased burden of disease related to HIV/AIDS, generally weak health systems management and low staff morale. The result is poor health outcomes relative to total health expenditure.

Read more

Statement by the Minister of Health, Dr Aaron Motsoaledi, on the National Health Leaders' Retreat 2010

26 January 2010

Good afternoon ladies and Gentlemen

Thank you for responding to our invitation. You are joining us here at the end of three days of intensive deliberations.

We gathered as the National Health Leadership together with International Experts from more than eight different countries chosen because those countries have experience in dealing with many of the major health policy challenges we, as South African, are also faced with.

An assessment of current support strategies for patients with TB in KwaZulu-Natal

Health Systems Trust (HST) has just released its latest publication entitled, An assessment of current support strategies for patients with TB in KwaZulu-Natal. The study probed the level of need for material assistance experienced by patients, and the impact of such assistance's provision.

District Health Barometer 2007/08

The Health Systems Trust (HST) released its latest edition of the District Health Barometer on the 6th of July at the HISA conference, Emperors Palace, Gauteng. The publication illustrates important aspects of the health system at district level through the analysis of a selected range of health indicators from which comparisons among districts and provinces can be made. Data feeding into the report are drawn from a range of sources including the national Department of Health, Statistics SA, the TB register and the national Treasury. It is the only publication of its kind in South Africa that makes available comparative data for the purpose of measuring and tracking progress in primary health care at the district level.