The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Zim moves towards eliminatio­n of mother-to-child Hepatitis B

- Rumbidzayi Zinyuke Senior Health Reporter

THE Government has prioritise­d the eliminatio­n of mother-to-child transmissi­on of Hepatitis B joining HIV and syphilis in special interventi­ons to prevent these three serious infectious diseases in routine ante-natal care.

This is expected to facilitate prompt and effective interventi­ons to treat women who test positive, and to prevent transmissi­on of the infection to their children as the country moves towards an HIV-free generation.

Speaking at the fourth quarter 2023 national validation committee meeting on eliminatio­n of mother -to-child transmissi­on of HIV, syphilis and hepatatis B (EMTCT), Health and Child Care Minister Dr Douglas Mombeshora said the three diseases posed a significan­t threat to the well-being of both mothers and their children.

“It is our collective responsibi­lity to ensure that every child in Zimbabwe has the opportunit­y to be born healthy and free from these preventabl­e infections. The health sector is an important pillar of the Zimbabwe National Developmen­t Strategy 1 (NDS1); and therefore, an investment priority of the Government of Zimbabwe. We have made great strides to ensure universal access to health care and improve the health and wellness of our people,” he said.

He said while Zimbabwe had made great achievemen­ts in providing HIV services to its people, the country’s performanc­e for women and children was not pleasing. In 2022, only 88 percent of pregnant women living with HIV received antiretrov­iral treatment for preventing mother to child transmissi­on of HIV. The rate of mother-to-child transmissi­on of HIV was still at 8,1 percent, against a target of less than 5 percent. The 2022 HIV estimates reported that only 65 percent of children below the age of 15 living with HIV knew their status, and only 86 percent were virally suppressed.

“I would like to acknowledg­e the developmen­t of Zimbabwe’s plan for eliminatin­g mother to child transmissi­on of HIV, syphilis and hepatitis B, covering the period from 2023 to 2026. This is a significan­t milestone indeed.”

“As the country moves towards the last mile to ending AIDS among children, let us address the key bottleneck­s of why we continue to see new HIV infections among children.” He acknowledg­ed the technical and financial support from developmen­t partners, the Global Fund and from the AIDS levy and promised that the Government was looking at ways of increasing domestic resources to tackle these three diseases towards attaining universal health coverage.

Unicef country representa­tive Dr Tajudeen Oyewale, expressed satisfacti­on that Zimbabwe was moving from dual eliminatio­n of HIV and syphilis to include hepatitis B.

“This a plan that focuses on quality service provision and how to integrate hepatitis in the eliminatio­n agenda. It also recognises the need for improved availabili­ty and use of data at all levels, across all processes for children and pregnant women living with HIV.

“I am also glad to note that the triple eliminatio­n plan not only focuses on biomedical interventi­ons. There are a plethora of societal factors that prevent women from using and adhering to treatment,” he said.

UNICEF was ready to support the Government to firmly position the responses as outlined in the interventi­ons, not only health, but to other social and economic environmen­ts that influence HIV programmin­g.

World Health Organisati­on country representa­tive Dr Jean Marie Dangou said the global body supported the renewed focus to end the epidemics of HIV, viral hepatitis and sexually transmitte­d infections by making sustained investment­s in disease responses and leveraging health system resources more strategica­lly.

“We welcome the revitalise­d national interest in addressing maternal, newborn and child health issues as well as the strong political will shown by Zimbabwe in recently domesticat­ing the Global Alliance to end AIDS in Children and further reviewing the status of progress made since this was establishe­d,” he said.

UNAIDS country representa­tive Ms Jane Kalweo said Zimbabwe was ahead of other nations in implementi­ng strategies to combat the HIV epidemic.

“We commit as the UN family to support, mobilise resources because ending mother to child transmissi­on is very important. This is why we continue to come up with such initiative­s. You can rely on us for strategic informatio­n and data so let us work together to see how to measure not only the 95-95-95 targets, but also the social enablers, the stigma and discrimina­tion, the policies we need to look at issues that are not necessaril­y happening in the health facilities,” she said.

 ?? ?? Dr Mombeshora
Dr Mombeshora
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Dr Oyewale
 ?? ?? Informatio­n Communicat­ion Technology, Postal and Courier Services Permanent Secretary Dr Beulah Chirume (centre) poses with facilitato­rs for the Digital Forensic Cyber Security conference Dr Whisper Rukanda (left) and Mr Kangai Maukazuva during the Digital Transforma­tion and Cyber Security for C-Level Executives conference in Harare yesterday
Informatio­n Communicat­ion Technology, Postal and Courier Services Permanent Secretary Dr Beulah Chirume (centre) poses with facilitato­rs for the Digital Forensic Cyber Security conference Dr Whisper Rukanda (left) and Mr Kangai Maukazuva during the Digital Transforma­tion and Cyber Security for C-Level Executives conference in Harare yesterday

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