During the 2023 dissemination of National HIV estimates, Dr. Ayisi-Addo expressed concern over the continued incidence of newborns contracting HIV from their moms. The PMTCT programme, supported by the Ghana Aids Commission and companions, goals to forestall such transmissions by encouraging HIV testing throughout antenatal care and offering remedy to HIV-positive moms to guard their infants.
“We are talking about covering about 90 per cent of all ANC attendance for HIV testing, so those who come in late do not get the treatment to prevent transmission to the baby. We need to be able to improve the ANC testing coverage. We need to improve so that people will have supervised delivery on their routine services offered when pregnant women come to the facility,” the Ghana News Agency quoted him as saying.
Current estimates present that out of 13,445 moms aged 15 to 49 who require PMTCT remedy, solely 12,108 are receiving it. Many infants contracting HIV are from moms who missed testing throughout antenatal care. Dr. Ayisi-Addo emphasised the necessity to enhance testing protection and guarantee supervised deliveries to forestall transmission.
The Programme Manager additionally identified that solely 730 out of roughly 6,000 PMTCT amenities supply antiretroviral remedy (ARV). This lack of entry usually forces pregnant ladies to journey to different centres, which they could keep away from attributable to transportation challenges. In response, the NACP plans to decentralise ARV distribution throughout all amenities.
“It is our aspiration and determination to make sure that we address all these issues and improve on strategic interventions to improve on the figures and reduce mother-to-child transmission to at least 2 per cent, which is an elimination target,” Dr. Ayisi-Addo added.
Additionally, postnatal transmission by means of breastfeeding stays a priority. Strict toddler feeding tips have been established for HIV-positive moms, however adherence is inconsistent, partly attributable to a scarcity of skilled service suppliers.
Dr. Stephen Atuahene, Director General of the Ghana Aids Commission, underscored the significance of strict adherence to remedy for viral suppression, essential for stopping perinatal transmission. He urged HIV-positive ladies to take care of their viral suppression standing, emphasizing that adherence is significant for guaranteeing the beginning of wholesome, HIV-free infants.
“As long as you can do that, you have a better chance of averting transmission to your baby and so adherence is very crucial to all persons living with HIV and taking the medication. This is so important for mothers because every woman will want to have a healthy baby and therefore you have to avoid any risk that will expose your child to infection,” he mentioned.
The NACP is decided to deal with these challenges and goals to cut back mother-to-child transmission charges to not less than 2%, aligning with the elimination goal.