A lab technician takes blood for a rapid HIV test, Yap State Hospital Laboratory, Federated States of Micronesia. |
Monday 18 March 2013, Secretariat of the Pacific
Community (SPC), Suva, Fiji –
This month Ministry of Health representatives and
stakeholders from across the region will come together to determine the future
direction of the response to HIV and other sexually transmitted infections
(STIs) in the Pacific.
‘With the conclusion of the Pacific Regional Strategy
on HIV and STIs this year, now is an opportune time to take stock of the
progress made and decide how best to sustain achievements while identifying
priority areas for continued donor support,’ said Dr Dennie Iniakwala, HIV and
STI Team Leader at SPC.
‘Here in the Pacific, we have some of the highest STI
prevalence rates in the world. Our people are therefore at greater risk of
contracting HIV. We must not become complacent. We must endeavour to sustain
and build on the progress made to date,’ said Dr Iniakwala.
To date, over AUD $53 million has been delivered to
the region for HIV and STI programming through the Pacific HIV and STI Response
Fund and The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. This
investment has led to improvements in the ability of Pacific Island countries
and territories (PICTs) to address HIV and other STIs.
The introduction of rapid HIV confirmatory testing,
for example, has greatly improved the turnaround time for HIV results, from 6
weeks to one day in many PICTs, and this has increased the number of people
coming for HIV testing.
‘These are important achievements. By increasing HIV
test accessibility and testing the right population groups in our communities,
we are better able to prevent and control HIV in our region,’ explained Tebuka
Toatu, HIV and STI Laboratory Specialist at SPC.
‘Previously, many laboratories had to send samples
overseas for confirmation of HIV test results. However, with the introduction
of rapid testing in 13 PICTs, national laboratories are now able to do their
own testing, more reliably and efficiently, and patients receive greatly
improved treatment,’ said Mr Toatu.
Regional strategy review workshops entitled ‘Making
waves: Pacific-led strategy for HIV and other STIs,’ will be held with South
Pacific and North Pacific HIV/ STI and Reproductive Health Managers in Nadi and
Guam on 18–21 March and 25–28 March respectively.
They will discuss the need for a renewed regional
strategy to guide the response to HIV and other STIs in the region, together
with regional partners and workshop hosts UNAIDS, WHO, UNICEF, UNFPA and SPC.
Further consultation will then take place with civil society representatives
and other stakeholders.
For more information please contact Jacinta Isaacs,
Strategic Health Communication Officer, SPC Public Health Division at jacintai@spc.int.
//
ENDS
The above article is from the Secretariat of the Pacific Community -- printed above for its significance to the state of health in general and to FSM
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