8 research outputs found

    Integrating reproductive and child health and HIV services in Tanzania: Implication to policy, systems and services

    Get PDF
    In Tanzania, reproductive health and HIV services are coordinated by the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare in two separate units namely Reproductive and Child Health Section and the National AIDS Control Programme. The importance of integrating the two services that are vertically run is expected to improve access to and uptake of key essential services and extend coverage to underserved and vulnerable populations and thus minimizing missed opportunities. Experts around the world recognize the central role of Sexual and Reproductive Health (SRH) services in preventing HIV infection. Evidence suggests that improving access to contraception for women to prevent pregnancy is an important and cost-effective way to prevent HIV-positive births. Integrating SRH and HIV services therefore verifies its importance for improving maternal and child health as well as leading to prevention of HIV infection.  The primary objective of this review was to gain an understanding of the current linkages between SRH and HIV within Tanzania’s policies, programmes, systems and services. Policy documents, guidelines, national laws, and published reports on SRH and HIV were reviewed.  The majority of the reviewed documents mentioned fundamentals of integration between SRH and HIV. Majority of policies and guidelines both in family planning (FP) and HIV documents mandate bi-directional linkages. This review suggests that there are linkages between the two services and can be operationalised together. However, policies and guidelines only specify services to be integrated without due consideration of resources and structural orientation for linked services

    Availability of HIV/AIDS community intervention programmes and quality of services in and around selected mining sites in Tanzania

    Get PDF
    Background: Mining is one of the major sectors of the country’s economy as it employs and attracts a large number of people from different areas. As a result, mining sites are at great risk of HIV transmission. While a few unsynchronized mine-specific population-based studies provide evidence of a growing HIV problem in this sector, virtually few evidence exists on availability and quality of interventions targeting HIV and AIDS in this population. The study was conducted to assess the availability and quality of HIV/AIDS intervention programmes in and around mining sites in Tanzania.Methods: This cross sectional study was conducted from November 2012 to April 2013. Both quantitative and qualitative methods were used to collect data. Study areas involved both mining sites and its surrounding communities in Kahama, Nzega and Geita Districts. It involved household members from villages in and around the mining sites, mining community relations officers, community health facility workers, district HIV/AIDS focal persons and village leaders.Results: A total of 463 individuals were recruited into the study for household interviews. In-depth interviews with Key Informants involved 15 respondents. HIV/AIDS intervention programmes in the study area were available despite that knowledge of their existence was limited to a segment of the community.  Their availability was only known to about 25% of the study respondents in Geita and Kahama study sites.  The programmes carried out intervention activities which included HIV/AIDS education campaigns, promoting uptake of voluntary counselling and testing services, promoting and supporting condom use, safer sex, and male circumcision. HIV/AIDS services such as screening, distribution of condoms and ARVs for infected people were available and were offered free of charge. Conclusion: Our findings show that HIV/AIDS intervention programmes were available despite that they were unequally distributed. Although their availability has contributed to the decrease of HIV prevalence in the community, knowledge of their availability was limited to some people in the community

    Community-based HIV services during Differentiated Service Delivery Models: a cross-sectional survey from nine regions in Tanzania

    Get PDF
    Introduction: To combat the HIV epidemic and reach the 90-90-90 goals, community-based HIV/AIDS services (CHBS) plays a great role. However, how well CHBS works in the era of adopting differentiated service delivery models for care and treatment has not been adequately evaluated. We hence assessed CBHS programs implemented by various partners with a focus on the coverage; program needs; linkage and referral process; consistent use of guidelines and training curricula and challenges faced by providers and clients. Methods: It was a cross-sectional study conducted in July 2020 in 9 regions using both quantitative and qualitative methods. Quantitative data were analyzed using STATA version 12 and qualitative data were managed using Thematic Content Analysis. Results: 26 implementing partners were offering CBHS in biomedical, behavioral, and structural areas. Their focus was on PLHIV, orphans, and key and vulnerable populations. The majority of PLHIV had a positive perception of different CBHS. Key factors in the perceived effectiveness of community HIV services were the consistent use and availability of guidelines and training curricula, standard operating procedures, and readiness of essential commodities and supplies. Out of 1391 PLHIV who were involved, 67.4% and 25.0% were tested at the health facility and communities respectively. About 69.8% were referred after confirming their seropositivity and forms were not given to about 57.5% when referred from health facilities to communities for CBHS. There was a deficit of 45% in health workers across different cadres, a deficit in all categories of supplies and equipment example the HIV test kit by 53.8%. Challenges for CBHS included financial hindrances, HIV-related stigma, and discrimination, distance to health facilities, and poor incentives for community health workers. Conclusion: it is important to address HIV-related stigma hence accelerating efforts to limit the spread of the HIV epidemic in the respective communities

    Experiences, Opportunities and Challenges of Implementing Task Shifting in Underserved Remote Settings: The Case of Kongwa District, Central Tanzania.

    Get PDF
    Tanzania is experiencing acute shortages of Health Workers (HWs), a situation which has forced health managers, especially in the underserved districts, to hastily cope with health workers' shortages by adopting task shifting. This has however been due to limited options for dealing with the crisis of health personnel. There are on-going discussions in the country on whether to scale up task shifting as one of the strategies for addressing health personnel crisis. However, these discussions are not backed up by rigorous scientific evidence. The aim of this paper is two-fold. Firstly, to describe the current situation of implementing task shifting in the context of acute shortages of health workers and, secondly, to provide a descriptive account of the potential opportunities or benefits and the likely challenges which might ensue as a result of implementing task shifting. We employed in-depth interviews with informants at the district level and supplemented the information with additional interviews with informants at the national level. Interviews focussed on the informants' practical experiences of implementing task shifting in their respective health facilities (district level) and their opinions regarding opportunities and challenges which might be associated with implementation of task shifting practices. At the national level, the main focus was on policy issues related to management of health personnel in the context of implementation of task shifting, in addition to seeking their opinions and perceptions regarding opportunities and challenges of implementing task shifting if formally adopted. Task shifting has been in practice for many years in Tanzania and has been perceived as an inevitable coping mechanism due to limited options for addressing health personnel shortages in the country. Majority of informants had the concern that quality of services is likely to be affected if appropriate policy infrastructures are not in place before formalising tasks shifting. There was also a perception that implementation of task shifting has ensured access to services especially in underserved remote areas. Professional discontent and challenges related to the management of health personnel policies were also perceived as important issues to consider when implementing task shifting practices. Additional resources for additional training and supervisory tasks were also considered important in the implementation of task shifting in order to make it deliver much the same way as it is for conventional modalities of delivering care. Task shifting implementation occurs as an ad hoc coping mechanism to the existing shortages of health workers in many undeserved areas of the country, not just in the study site whose findings are reported in this paper. It is recommended that the most important thing to do now is not to determine whether task shifting is possible or effective but to define the limits of task shifting so as to reach a consensus on where it can have the strongest and most sustainable impact in the delivery of quality health services. Any action towards this end needs to be evidence-based

    Willingness and Barriers to Voluntary Counselling and Testing Among Self-Perceived Healthy Adults in Tanzania

    Get PDF
    Background: Despite the ongoing efforts to promote HIV testing, the majority of adults in Tanzania remain untested, and many remain unwilling to know their HIV status. Understanding the underlying reasons for this unwillingness to test and know one’s status will support the development of targeted interventions to promote the uptake of HIV testing. This paper explores the willingness of and barriers faced by self-perceived healthy individuals to test for HIV in selected districts of Tanzania.   Methods: A cross-sectional survey was conducted in urban and rural wards between October 2011 and March 2012. Structured questionnaires with closed- and open-ended questions were administered to heads of randomly selected households. Information collected included socioeconomic, demographics, rural/urban backgrounds and the perceived reasons which hinder household heads/members to access and utilise HIV-testing services. Regression analysis was conducted to assess the relationship between the same factors and participants’ willingness to go for an HIV test in the near future.   Results: There were 1,429 respondents from randomly selected households interviewed, and out of these, 57.1% were women, and 42.9% were men. The mean age of all respondents was 33.6 years; men were slightly older (mean age, 37 years) than women (mean age, 34 years). Almost one-third (n=433, 30.3%) of the respondents reported having ever tested for HIV, of whom 294 (61.8%) were women, and 139 (38.2%) were men. Being educated to at least the primary school level, being an urban resident, and being female increased the probability of HIV testing by 1.7% (P<.001), 1.3% (P<.005) and 0.2% (P<.005) respectively. Further, for each year, one’s age increased the probability of positive future intentions to test for HIV increased by 0.4 % (P<.005). Education, residence and marital status were not significantly associated with future willingness to test. Fear of being stigmatised and discriminated was observed to be one of the important barriers for HIV testing among those who had never tested and those who were unwilling to test in the future.   Conclusion: In urban areas, knowledge of the benefits of HIV testing is higher than in rural areas. Overall stigma remains the most salient barrier to HIV testing and interventions that address this, and other structural drivers for stigma need to be addressed in order for people’s willingness to test to increase. Finally, health systems need to be strengthened to further encourage testing and be ready to provide quality and non-discriminatory services once people’s willingness to test becomes apparent

    "Should We Take Them or Leave Them?" A Qualitative Study to Understand the Social, Cultural, and Ethical Issues Associated With the Lifecycle Management of Insecticide-Treated Nets in Tanzania

    Get PDF
    Background: Insecticide-treated nets (ITNs) are highly effective in reducing morbidity and mortality from malaria. However, it is widely accepted that ITNs – if not re-treated – lose their effectiveness with time and eventually need to be replaced. This study sought to determine the social, ethical, and cultural issues related to the lifecycle of ITNs, which includes net ownership, usage, maintenance, reuse, recycling, disposal, and replacement.   Methods: In this qualitative study, conducted in the districts of Mtwara Rural, Kilombero, and Muheza, Tanzania, we collected information about bed nets, including usage habits, types, treatment status, materials used, brands, acquisition sources, and perceptions thereof. We conducted 23 key informant interviews and 20 focus group discussions with village leaders, other influential people in the community, and district health-care personnel.   Results: ITNs were deemed acceptable and used by most community members in the participating communities. Alternative uses and disposal practices of used bed nets were also common among community members; however, participants had limited knowledge regarding the health and environmental risks associated with these practices. Most participants did not perceive bed net recycling as a sustainable option. Recycling was considered feasible, however, if effective infrastructure for collection and disposal could be established. Poverty was identified as a major driving force towards alternative uses of bed nets. Financial constraints also meant that not all household members were able to sleep under bed nets; pregnant mothers, children under 5 years old, and the elderly were prioritised.   Conclusion: Our findings may inform the National Malaria Control Programme and other stakeholders as they develop country-specific and environmentally friendly bed net replacement strategies. Appropriate strategies will help ensure sustained protection of vulnerable populations against malaria, while considering local social, ethical, and cultural issues related to the recovery of bed nets

    Integrating reproductive and child health and HIV services in Tanzania: Implication to policy, systems and services

    No full text
    In Tanzania, reproductive health and HIV services are coordinated by the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare in two separate units namely Reproductive and Child Health Section and the National AIDS Control Programme. The importance of integrating the two services that are vertically run is expected to improve access to and uptake of key essential services and extend coverage to underserved and vulnerable populations and thus minimizing missed opportunities. Experts around the world recognize the central role of Sexual and Reproductive Health (SRH) services in preventing HIV infection. Evidence suggests that improving access to contraception for women to prevent pregnancy is an important and cost-effective way to prevent HIV-positive births. Integrating SRH and HIV services therefore verifies its importance for improving maternal and child health as well as leading to prevention of HIV infection. The primary objective of this review was to gain an understanding of the current linkages between SRH and HIV within Tanzania’s policies, programmes, systems and services. Policy documents, guidelines, national laws, and published reports on SRH and HIV were reviewed. The majority of the reviewed documents mentioned fundamentals of integration between SRH and HIV. Majority of policies and guidelines both in family planning (FP) and HIV documents mandate bi-directional linkages. This review suggests that there are linkages between the two services and can be operationalised together. However, policies and guidelines only specify services to be integrated without due consideration of resources and structural orientation for linked services

    Proceedings for the 31st Annual Joint Scientific Conference of the National Institute for Medical Research (NIMR); 17th-19th May 2022.

    No full text
    Abstract The National Institute for Medical Research (NIMR) was established under the Parliament of the United Republic of Tanzania Act of 1979 (Cap.59. R.E. 2002) and became operational in 1980. It is mandated among other functions, to establish and operate systems of documentation and dissemination of information on any aspect of the medical research carried out by or on behalf of the institute. Since 1982, the Annual Joint Scientific Conference (AJSC) has been an important platform where researchers, policymakers, practitioners, development partners, media and any   other health research stakeholders discuss, and deliberate evidence generated from diverse research conducted across the world. Objectives: The AJSC objectives have always been to; (i) promote health research for sustainable socio-economic development in Tanzania and Sub-Sahara Africa; (ii) share findings of health research with key stakeholders and the general public; and (iii) discuss and explore new health research and service priority areas. The 31st Annual Joint Scientific Conference: It was held from 17th to 19th May 2022 at Julius Nyerere International Convention Center (JNICC) in Dar es Salaam and Hon. Isidor Phillipo Mpango, Vice President, United Republic of Tanzania graced its opening ceremony. The main theme of the Conference was “A Multisectoral Approach for Health: An Agenda for Health Systems Strengthening Towards Achieving Universal Health Coverage.” The conference had nine sub-themes namely non-communicable disease, neglected tropical diseases, emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases, health systems strengthening and health care financing, nutrition, reproductive, maternal, neonatal, child and adolescent health, traditional and alternative medicine, Innovations and health technology, Infectious diseases and anti-microbial resistance and cross-cutting health issues. There were Oral and poster presentations, symposia and round table discussions, dissemination sessions on malaria molecular surveillance and the launch of the Genomics laboratory at NIMR headquarters. The Conference generated evidences and action-oriented recommendations to aid the general practices, assist in formulating policies and provide guidance to disease control programs in subsequent years. &nbsp
    corecore