The shortage of human resources for health, and in particular physicians, is one of the major barriers to achieve universal access to HIV care and treatment. In September 2005, a pilot program of nurse-centered antiretroviral treatment (ART) prescription was launched in three rural primary health centers in Rwanda. The authors retrospectively evaluated the feasibility and effectiveness of this task-shifting model using descriptive data. Medical records of 1,076 patients enrolled in HIV care and treatment services from September 2005 to March 2008 were reviewed to assess: (i) compliance with national guidelines for ART eligibility and prescription, and patient monitoring and (ii) key outcomes, such as retention, body weight, and CD4 cell count change at 6, 12, 18, and 24 mo after ART initiation. Of these, no ineligible patients were started on ART and only one patient received an inappropriate ART prescription. Patient outcomes in the pilot program compared favorably with other ART cohorts in sub-Saharan Africa and with those from a recent evaluation of the national ART program in Rwanda. These findings suggest that nurses can effectively and safely prescribe ART when given adequate training, mentoring, and support.
Bibliography
Theme area
Equitable health services, Equity and HIV/AIDS
Title of publication Task Shifting for Scale-up of HIV Care: Evaluation of Nurse-Centered Antiretroviral Treatment at Rural Health Centers in Rwanda
Date of publication
2009 October
Publication type
Journal Article
Publication details
PloS Med 6 10
Publication status
Published
Language
English
Keywords
HIV care, nurse centred, antiretrovirl treatment, Rwanda
Abstract
Country
Publisher
PloS Med