AFRICA: Worldwide appeal for free AIDS treatment
© MSF
Free By Five campaign aims to get free treatment for
people living with HIV/AIDS
DURBAN, 14 Dec 2004 (PLUSNEWS) - Nearly 600 health
experts, economists and policy-makers have joined an appeal for free
AIDS treatment for all people living with HIV/AIDS in the developing
world.
The "Free By 5" declaration will be presented to the
World Bank, aid donors, the World Health Organisation (WHO), UNAIDS and
many other parties in the next few days.
Of the 5.5 million HIV-positive people in need of
treatment globally, only 440,000 are receiving it. In Africa, not more
than four percent of people living with HIV/AIDS are on antiretroviral
(ARV) treatment. Despite decreasing market prices of the drugs, many
people who have AIDS in developing countries are dying because they
cannot afford medication.
The declaration, initiated by the Health Economics and
HIV/AIDS Research Division (HEARD) of the University of KwaZulu-Natal in
Durban, South Africa, urges international donors to actively promote the
implementation of free treatment, and pledge additional resources to
make this a reality. It also presses WHO and UNAIDS to formally adopt
clear guidelines on the necessity of free ARV treatment.
"We are hoping to spur a debate that will lead to a
clear commitment [from international health institutions and
governments] to provide free treatment," Professor Allan Whiteside,
director of HEARD, told PlusNews.
Free treatment should not only mean free ARV drugs, but also include
free HIV tests, consultations with medical staff, laboratory
examinations, hospitalisations, treatment of opportunistic diseases and
prophylactic treatment, he added.
WHO, which aims to have three million HIV-positive people on ARVs in the
course of next year, had not clearly defined what affordability meant,
who the poor people were, and under which conditions free ARVs should be
provided, Whiteside explained.
He demanded that governments in resource-poor settings engage in an
appropriate allocation of domestic resources to show their commitment.
UNAIDS estimates that the amount of money needed for treatment and care
in 2005 will be US $3.8 billion worldwide, increasing to $6.7 billion in
2007.
Only Brasil, Uganda and Venezuela are presently providing free ARV
therapy. Thailand and South Africa have started implementing free ARV
programmes.
But in the vast majority of resource-poor countries, access to treatment
is not completely free of charge. In Senegal, for example, ARVs, the CD4
count test, which measures the strength of the body's immune system, and
viral load tests, measuring the amount of HIV in the blood, are free,
but other laboratory exams required to initiate therapy have to be paid
for.
In countries such as Burkina Faso, Cameroon and Niger, ARV therapy is
heavily subsidised but patients have to make monthly contributions. They
also have to cover the costs of medication for opportunistic infections,
laboratory exams, consultations and hospitalisation.
Asking patients to pay for their treatment increased the economic
vulnerability of affected households. "Free treatment is a prerequisite
for the achievement of universal access," the declaration proclaimed.
The "Free By 5" declaration has gathered support from nearly 600 key
stakeholders and organisations all over the world, including UN Special
Envoy on HIV/AIDS Stephen Lewis; vice president of the Global Fund to
fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, Helene Rossert-Blavier, who is
also director-general of AIDES, a French NGO; and Gorik Ooms, executive
director of Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) in Belgium.
For many, ARV treatment meant "the difference, literally, between life
and death. However, if it is not free, then the poor will not benefit,"
Lewis remarked.
The declaration states that payment required for AIDS treatment excludes
many patients, heightens people's vulnerability to HIV/AIDS and
decreases treatment adherence, which may lead to drug resistance.
"Patient fees often make it impossible to reach those who need treatment
most," explained Ooms, of MSF Belgium. "The families that are most
affected by AIDS in many cases lose their income from labour and can
simply not afford to pay for treatment. Where AIDS care is provided in
clinics that are sponsored by international donors, but require patients
to pay part of the cost, patients that can no longer afford tests or
drugs will drop out."
"If we fail to provide [treatment], societies face catastrophes", the
Free By 5 declaration argued.
From a medical, public health, economic and human rights perspective,
providing universal free treatment to AIDS patients is a necessity:
"Levels of poverty in most resource-poor settings are such that, unless
treatment is provided completely for free, people will be excluded,"
said Whiteside. "I believe that it makes economic sense for public
health services to offer free HIV/AIDS treatment."