Guest guest Posted May 26, 2001 Report Share Posted May 26, 2001 Uganda to give AIDS treatment to expectant mothers By Busharizi KAMPALA, May 24 (Reuters) - Uganda plans to offer free AIDS treatment for the prevention of mother-to-child HIV infection throughout the country by the end of next year, health officials said on Thursday. A limited programme that started in April 2000 provided 700 mothers in the Ugandan capital with free treatment and is expected to be treating double that number 12 months from now. By the end of 2002, the programme is expected to be operating nationwide, offering counselling and testing on a voluntary basis to all mothers, leading to treatment for those affected, the officials said. " The expansion will require a lot of logistics- testing, counselling and infrastructure, " the director of the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) health and nutrition programme in Uganda, Dr Iyorlumun Uhaa, told Reuters. " But by the end of next year we should be able to provide the service all over the country. " Health ministry figures show that every year up to 70,000 babies are born infected with HIV. Not all pregnant women are expected to volunteer for HIV tests. " Currently we are already working out of five sites which will quickly expand to 11 sites over the next year, " Guay, a researcher from the U.S. s Hopkins University, told Reuters. Guay and several Ugandan scientists announced last July after months of research that work on the drug Nevirapine (NVP) had shown it could reduce the risk of mother-to-child HIV transmission by up to 50 percent. The treatment consists of a single NVP tablet administered as soon as the mother goes into labour and a single syrup dose to the newborn within 72 hours of delivery. The drug works by inhibiting an enzyme in the AIDS-causing virus that promotes its replication. The full treatment costs in all just under $4 compared with up to $800 for similar treatments with the drug AZT. " Currently we are administering AZT to mothers in all but one of our sites, " Uhaa said. " But the plan is to move towards the cheaper and easier-to- administer NVP at all our sites. " As a result of government efforts to combat the deadly disease, officials say HIV infection rates among pregnant women are just over 20 percent today from 33 percent in 1991. Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni pushed in the late 1980s for an open policy on AIDS that provided information on the disease and promoted preventative measures. About 1.5 million of the East African country's 22 million people are living with the AIDS virus. About 800,000 people have died from AIDS since it was first discovered in Uganda in 1982. Copyright 2001 Reuters Limited. __________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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