2006
DOI: 10.4102/sajhivmed.v7i4.597
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Sustainability of long-term treatment in a rural district: The Lusikisiki model of decentralised HIV/AIDS care

Abstract: No abstract available.

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Cited by 14 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…NIMART is a complex intervention intended to improve healthcare access and equity, ideally without compromising the quality of care, in resource-limited settings. 11 12 Optimal task-shifting requires well-resourced, multidimensional support including: health systems strengthening 13 ; intensive staff engagement, training and mentoring 14–16 ; redistributing basic tasks to non-clinical staff 17 and robust referral, drug supply and quality assurance systems. 18 South Africa's plan to rapidly implement NIMART on an unprecedented nationwide scale raised questions regarding its capacity to meet all of these requirements.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…NIMART is a complex intervention intended to improve healthcare access and equity, ideally without compromising the quality of care, in resource-limited settings. 11 12 Optimal task-shifting requires well-resourced, multidimensional support including: health systems strengthening 13 ; intensive staff engagement, training and mentoring 14–16 ; redistributing basic tasks to non-clinical staff 17 and robust referral, drug supply and quality assurance systems. 18 South Africa's plan to rapidly implement NIMART on an unprecedented nationwide scale raised questions regarding its capacity to meet all of these requirements.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Trained health workers carry out administration of ART and follow-up despite large distances between the primary health care facility and the many patients needing ART (>5 h by foot for some). Medecins sans Frontieres has assisted in setting up effective clinics in semi-rural regions of South Africa (Lusikisiki in the Eastern Cape [6] and also Khayelitsha in the Western Cape [3]), and similar programs have been successful in Nigeria [1]. UNAIDS has also launched pilot projects to improve ART access in Uganda, Cote d'Ivoire, Chile, and Vietnam [5] (see [7-9] for other recent reviews of the progress in resource-constrained settings).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Decentralizing ART services away from urban hospitals, not only improves accessibility for rural areas and creates community support, it also relieves the hospital bottleneck (24). Providing ART in rural clinics speeds up the initiation process, allows more people to receive care and frees up hospitals for other services (24). ART clinics can be quite basic and can be run primarily by community members and nurses (24).…”
Section: Decentralization and Simplificationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Providing ART in rural clinics speeds up the initiation process, allows more people to receive care and frees up hospitals for other services (24). ART clinics can be quite basic and can be run primarily by community members and nurses (24). In this decentralized approach, doctors play a more supervisory role, and delegate many of the tasks to nurses and medically trained community members.…”
Section: Decentralization and Simplificationmentioning
confidence: 99%