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HELP AVAILABLE: More than 200 pregnant women across Gauteng didn’t take advantage of the services this year. PHOTO: AP
HELP AVAILABLE: More than 200 pregnant women across Gauteng didn’t take advantage of the services this year. PHOTO: AP

Mother-to-baby HIV transmission a concern in SA despite free prevention

MOGOMOTSI MAGOME
It’s a worrying question for health officials in one of the richest and most developed areas of the African continent: Why are babies being born with HIV when free medication is available to prevent mother-to-child transmission?

In the first half of this year, 232 babies were born with HIV in South Africa’s Gauteng Region, which includes Johannesburg and the capital of Pretoria and is home to at least 15 million people.

“We do still find it very concerning that in this day and age, with all the preventative programmes that’s available free of charge at our clinics, that we are still finding babies testing positive,” said Melanie Langeveldt, the director for primary healthcare programmes in Tshwane, which includes Pretoria.

Mother-to-child transmission of HIV globally remains a concern for UNAIDS, which estimates there are 120 000 new infections annually in children aged 14 years and younger around the world, while over 1.3 million children are living with HIV.



Free treatment

South Africa has one of the highest rates of HIV in the world. About 12.7% of its population, or about 7.9 million people, live with HIV. The country has about 150 000 new infections every year.

Pregnant women in South Africa can access HIV testing and antiretroviral therapy free of charge from health facilities.

It is not clear why the more than 200 pregnant women across Gauteng didn’t take advantage of the services this year, or why 211 women in the second half of last year didn’t either.

Alarmed health officials believe even one case of mother-to-child HIV transmission is too many, considering the availability of treatment.

“With the medicines and science available today, we can ensure that all babies are born – and remain – HIV-free,” UNAIDS executive director Winnie Byanyima said in July, adding that resources must be made available everywhere around the world.



Factors

The data in Gauteng shows that many of the mothers who gave birth this year to children with HIV did so in government-run health clinics where free HIV testing and treatment is available.

Langeveldt said one contributing factor is the failure of some pregnant women to present themselves at a clinic as soon as they fall pregnant, with some women not aware of their HIV status.

Other pregnant women receive medication, but the treatment is interrupted for various reasons, including migration. Some pregnant women are infected during pregnancy or breastfeeding. And some women do not stick to the guidelines of continuous and exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months.

Such factors are seen globally in mother-to-child transmission.

Langeveldt said her department is now engaged in widespread campaigns to inform women that mother-to-child transmissions are preventable if the strict treatment offered at clinics is followed.



Healthy baby

Mapule Radebe is among the women who have benefitted from medical treatment to avoid passing on HIV to her children.

In 2015, she tested positive for HIV and was soon receiving antiretroviral treatment. She was concerned about the possibility of having children born with HIV but learned that transmission of the virus could be prevented.

This year she gave birth to her second child, who was also free of HIV.

“To all women out there who are HIV positive and expecting babies, I would urge them to continue taking their treatment throughout their nine months and continue doing so even after giving birth, for the sake of their children,” Radebe advised.

- AP NEWS

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Namibian Sun 2024-11-21

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