by Nina Hasen, HIV and TB Director, PSI
As PSI celebrates World AIDS Day, the future of the global HIV response seems more uncertain than ever. What will new leadership in the US government mean for the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) program, along with US investments in The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria? What impact will a new White House have on our efforts to expand access to HIV prevention, care and treatment to the most vulnerable populations?
While we don’t yet have the answers to these questions, our confidence in approaches that empower people and bring services closer to them is growing. In 2016, PSI’s work in HIV self-testing exploded. Leading the UNITAID/PSI HIV Self-Testing in Africa (STAR) consortium, PSI brought HIV self-testing to thousands of people across Malawi, Zambia and Zimbabwe. We saw that when offered the chance to test themselves – in the privacy of their homes and often together with their partner – many people who had never tested before came forward. And those who got a positive test result made their way to clinics in record numbers. This is good news no matter where you sit on the political spectrum: empowering the consumer to take charge of her or his own health pays rich dividends in health impact.
Moving forward, PSI will bring this insight to more and more HIV services. We’ll continue our work in HIV self-testing, bringing it to more countries and experimenting with new technologies and approaches: how about buying a low-cost test kit in a pharmacy? Or from a vending machine?
We’ll also take the lessons of HIV self-testing to antiretroviral treatment, bringing drugs and providers out to rural areas so that those far from clinics can access services in ways that are convenient to them. Already, we’re seeing incredible results in a new community treatment program in Zimbabwe; almost 100% of those who test positive begin antiretroviral therapy the same day, a far cry from the weeks- or months-long gaps between diagnosis and treatment in most settings.
Bringing services closer to those who need them is about more than products. PSI has been developing and refining programs that use social media, smartphone apps and cyber-educators to bring HIV services into the homes and onto the phones of millions of people around the world. These programs empower consumers to seek out existing services as well as new tools, like drugs to prevent HIV infection and newer, better treatment regimens.
There’s no question that the political winds have shifted and may create rough seas for our work in the HIV response. But by focusing on putting consumers in charge of their own HIV prevention and treatment, PSI is charting a course for the future that everyone can buy into: better health for more people on their own terms.
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Watch to learn how PSI, leading the UNITAID/PSI HIV Self-Testing in Africa (STAR) consortium, brought HIV self-testing to thousands of people across Malawi, Zambia and Zimbabwe in 2016.