A package of primary health care services for comprehensive family-centred HIV/AIDS care and treatment programs in low-income settings |
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Authors: | Michael A. Tolle |
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Affiliation: | Baylor International Pediatric AIDS Intiative, Baylor College of Medicine, Texas Children's Hospital Houston, TX, USA |
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Abstract: | Particularly in resource-limited settings, HIV/AIDS is a family concern. Separate services for children and adults may make accessing care more difficult for families than services where family members can be cared for together. Implicit in comprehensive, family-centred approaches to care are the broader notions of longitudinal primary care and linkages to other services, including those based in communities. As highly-active antiretroviral therapy becomes more available, and the direct burden of HIV-associated morbidity diminishes, HIV-infected individuals require primary care that goes beyond exclusive management of HIV and related conditions, including preventive services and the management of common medical issues. The prevention of tuberculosis, diarrhoea, and, in endemic regions, malaria; the addressing of debilitating depression; cervical screening; and the management of chronic cardiovascular disease and its risk factors are all of benefit to patients accessing HIV/AIDS care. Packaging such services is an effective means both of standardizing care within a program and of ensuring patients receives a full roster of available interventions. As family-centred care models develop in resource-limited settings, the availability of evidence-based service packages such as presented here will help program designers prioritize available human and materiel resources toward those interventions that improve patients' global health and well being. |
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Keywords: | package of services poor settings preventive care family based HIV/AIDS care primary health care |
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