Author: Grimsrud, Anna; Wilkinson, Lynne
                    Title: Acceleration of differentiated service delivery for HIV treatment in subâ€Saharan Africa during COVIDâ€19  Cord-id: rewmth1w  Document date: 2021_6_9
                    ID: rewmth1w
                    
                    Snippet: INTRODUCTION: In response to COVIDâ€19, national ministries of health adapted HIV service delivery guidelines to ensure uninterrupted access to antiretroviral therapy (ART) and limit the frequency of contact with health facilities. In this commentary, we summarize four ways in which differentiated service delivery (DSD) for HIV treatment has been accelerated during COVIDâ€19 in policy and implementation in subâ€Saharan Africa (SSA) – (i) expanding eligibility for DSD for HIV treatment, (ii)
                    
                    
                    
                     
                    
                    
                    
                    
                        
                            
                                Document: INTRODUCTION: In response to COVIDâ€19, national ministries of health adapted HIV service delivery guidelines to ensure uninterrupted access to antiretroviral therapy (ART) and limit the frequency of contact with health facilities. In this commentary, we summarize four ways in which differentiated service delivery (DSD) for HIV treatment has been accelerated during COVIDâ€19 in policy and implementation in subâ€Saharan Africa (SSA) – (i) expanding eligibility for DSD for HIV treatment, (ii) extending multiâ€month dispensing (MMD) and reducing the frequency of clinical consultations, (iii) emphasizing communityâ€based models and (iv) integrating/aligning with TB preventative therapy (TPT), nonâ€communicable disease (NCD) treatments and family planning commodities. DISCUSSION: Across SSA in 2020, countries both adapted and emphasized policies supporting DSD for HIV treatment in response to COVIDâ€19. Access to DSD for HIV treatment was expanded by reducing the time required on ART before eligibility and being more inclusive of specific populations including children and adolescents, pregnant and breastfeeding women and those on second†and thirdâ€line regimens. Access to extended ART refills, or MMD, was accelerated across many countries. A renewed focus was given to outâ€ofâ€facility communityâ€based models of ART distribution. In some settings, there was acknowledgement of the need to integrate or align other chronic medications with ART. CONCLUSIONS: Adaptations to DSD for HIV treatment in response to COVIDâ€19 have resulted in rapid policy change and in some cases, acceleration of implementation in SSA. As the COVIDâ€19 pandemic evolves, there is a critical need to assess the impact of these adaptations and, where beneficial, ensure that policies implemented in response to COVIDâ€19 become the new normal.
 
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