PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

HIV drug resistance early warning indicators in Namibia for public health action.

  • Anna Jonas,
  • Justice Gweshe,
  • Milner Siboleka,
  • Michael Deklerk,
  • Michael Gawanab,
  • Alfons Badi,
  • Victor Sumbi,
  • Dawn Pereko,
  • Abraham Blom,
  • Samson Mwinga,
  • Michael R Jordan,
  • Logan Jerger,
  • Kiger Lau,
  • Steven Y Hong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0065653
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 6
p. e65653

Abstract

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HIV drug resistance (HIVDR) testing is not routinely available in many resource-limited settings, therefore antiretroviral therapy (ART) program and site factors known to be associated with emergence of HIVDR should be monitored to optimize the quality of patient care and minimize the emergence of preventable HIVDR.In 2010, Namibia selected five World Health Organization Early Warning Indicators (EWIs) and scaled-up monitoring from 9 to 33 ART sites: ART prescribing practices, Patients lost to follow-up (LTFU) at 12 months, Patients switched to a second-line regimen at 12 months, On-time antiretroviral (ARV) drug pick-up, and ARV drug-supply continuity.Records allowed reporting on three of the five selected EWIs. 22 of 33 (67%) sites met the target of 100% initiated on appropriate first-line regimens. 17 of 33 (52%) sites met the target of ≤20% LTFU. 15 of 33 (45%) sites met the target of 0% switched to a second-line regimen.EWI monitoring directly resulted in public health action which will optimize the quality of care, specifically the strengthening of ART record systems, engagement of ART sites, and operational research for improved adherence assessment and ART patient defaulter tracing.