MSF
MSF at the IAC
Doctors Without Borders Home

« MSF-USA home page

Mind the Gaps

AIDS Treatment in the Context of Health Care Worker Shortages

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) hosted a satellite meeting on August 3, 2008 at the XVII International AIDS Conference in Mexico City on the impact of the health care worker shortage on access to HIV/AIDS treatment and lessons learned from clinicians and advocates working on the ground to overcome this gap.

Introduction

Photos from Mind the Gaps

View larger

An estimated 70% of people who need antiretroviral treatment are still not getting it.  Recent advocacy efforts have brought more attention to the critical shortage of health care workers and how this shortage contributes to unnecessary illness and death.

In Malawi a medical assistant can see up to 200 patients per day, far too many to ensure quality HIV care. Patients in parts of Mozambique can wait up to two months to start AIDS treatment, and many have died during the wait. In parts of Lesotho, over half of nursing posts remain vacant, and the leading cause of staff attrition is death due to HIV/AIDS.

One strategy used by Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) and others is task-shifting to lower levels of health care workers and lay health care workers. However, this strategy has its own limits and MSF teams and other implementers find themselves hitting a wall in terms of further scaling up and maintaining an acceptable level of quality care.

Urgent measures must be taken by donor and national governments to retain a skilled workforce and attract new staff by increasing pay, improving working conditions, and keeping staff healthy. The lack of health care workers must be confronted as an emergency for the millions of people with HIV/AIDS still waiting for treatment.

Presentations

WELCOME AND INTRODUCTION

Nathan Ford, Head of Medical Unit, MSF South Africa

Setting the scene

  • Stephen Lewis, Co-director of AIDS-Free World and former UN Special Envoy on HIV/AIDS in Africa
  • The Hon. Dr Mphu Ramatlapeng, Minister of Health & Social Welfare of the Kingdom of Lesotho

TASK-SHIFTING: LESSONS AND LIMITS

Moderator: Dr Joia Mukherjee, Partners in Health (PIH)

  • Case study 1:
    Nurse-based ART and the role of facility-based lay health workers at primary care level in rural Lesotho
    Dr Pheello Lethola, MSF Lesotho

    Download mp3

  • Case study 2:
    Universal access and upholding adherence in rural Malawi: the contribution of task shifting to more effective ART
    Marielle Bemelmans, MSF Malawi

    Download mp3

  • Trends and challenges of task-shifting to lay workers
    Dr Wim Van Damme, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium
    Listen:

    Download mp3

  • Finding and holding the line on quality: building an operational research agenda
    Dr David Olson, MSF

    Download mp3

  • Sr Mpumelelo Mantangan, Professional Nurse, Ubuntu HIV/TB Clinic, Khayelitsha, South Africa (TBC)

THE POLICY ENVIRONMENT: BARRIERS, ACTIONS, AND AGENDAS

Moderator: Dr. Mit Philips, MSF

  • Vuyiseka Dubula, Secretary General, Treatment Action Campaign (TAC), South Africa