Guest guest Posted July 18, 2001 Report Share Posted July 18, 2001 SOUTH AFRICA: Trials show antiretroviral therapy can benefit the poor. ________________________________ According to a 'Sunday Independent' report, clinical trials conducted in Johannesburg and Cape Town have shown that despite poverty and scarce clinical resources, antiretrovirals can be used successfully by poor people. These findings come after the government's repeated refusal to offer antiretroviral therapy to all saying the majority of South Africans were poor and would misuse the drugs. Speaking to IRIN on Wednesday, Dr Ian Sanne of the Clinical HIV Trials Unit of the University of Witwatersrand, said that most of the people involved in the trials were " the poorest of the poor " travelling from squatter camps into urban centres. They were from often unemployed or from a low income background and represented the majority of the population. The trials were carried out from 1998 to 2001 in " resource-poor settings from three academic trial units " with 763 participants. Strong side effects of the drugs were marginal, of the 14 deaths reported, 3 were drug related. IRIN obtained a report on the trials which stated that, " overall it is possible to successfully treat patients from resource-poor settings with antiretroviral therapy " . Sanne said that with the use of an Internet-based patient monitoring system along with the " Right to Care " programme, the implementation of HIV/AIDS treatment in the poorest areas of the country could now be accelerated. The " Right to Care " programme will provide Web-based patient diagnostics, treatment and care in primary health care clinics. The project is spearheaded by Sanne and he is collaborating with mining company Anglo American, which will be the first company to implement it. The Department of Health responded to the results of the trials by maintaining that government would not shift from its policy on antiretrovirals. Department of Health spokesman Sibani Mngadi told IRIN that more had to be done before the government could consider providing antiretrovirals " across the board " . He added that problems of capacity needed to be adressed and a proper infrastructure had to be set in place before antiretrovirals would be made available to the poor. _________________________ s ACT UP Philadelphia Health GAP Coalition ----------------------------------- A cross posting from pwha-net@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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