乌干达的COVID-19和艾滋病毒护理连续性:尽量减少附带损害

Q2 Multidisciplinary AAS Open Research Pub Date : 2020-07-02 DOI:10.12688/aasopenres.13099.1
E. Kagimu, E. Martyn, J. Gakuru, J. Kasibante, M. Rutakingirwa, Richard Kwizera, K. Ssebambulidde, Darlisha A Williams, J. Ellis, F. Cresswell, D. Meya
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引用次数: 2

摘要

新型冠状病毒,即SARS-CoV-2,在2019年12月在中国武汉首次被描述后的几个月内就在世界各地传播,导致了前所未有的全球卫生紧急情况。虽然欧洲和北美是目前的感染中心,但全球卫生界正在为这种新疾病对非洲大陆的潜在影响做准备。建模研究预测,年轻人和农村人口等因素可能对减缓新冠肺炎在世界卫生组织(世界卫生组织)非洲地区的传播具有保护作用,然而,仅在大流行的第一年就预测有2.2亿人感染和460万人住院,脆弱的卫生系统仍可能面临巨大压力。此外,预计2020-2021年,为艾滋病毒感染者或有感染艾滋病毒风险的人提供服务的后续中断将导致撒哈拉以南非洲新增50万成人艾滋病毒死亡,艾滋病毒母婴传播增加2倍。忽视这些预测可能会产生严重后果,我们有可能将艾滋病相关死亡人数“倒退”到十多年前的水平。根据我们目前在乌干达新冠肺炎大流行的经验,我们探讨了为减缓新冠肺炎传播而实施的公共卫生措施对艾滋病毒护理连续性的潜在影响,并建议艾滋病毒服务、政策制定者和政府紧急解决的重点领域,以最大限度地减少附带损害。
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COVID-19 and the HIV care continuum in Uganda: minimising collateral damage
The novel coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2, has spread across the world within months of its first description in Wuhan, China in December 2019, resulting in an unprecedented global health emergency. Whilst Europe and North America are the current epicentres of infection, the global health community are preparing for the potential effects of this new disease on the African continent. Modelling studies predict that factors such as  youthful and rural population may be protective in mitigating the spread of COVID-19 in the World Health Organisation (WHO) African Region, however, with 220 million infections and 4.6 million hospitalisations predicted in the first year of the pandemic alone, fragile health systems could still be placed under significant strain. Furthermore, subsequent disruptions to the provision of services for people living with HIV, or at risk of acquiring HIV, are predicted to lead to an extra 500,000 adult HIV deaths and a 2-fold increase in mother to child transmission of HIV in sub-Saharan Africa in 2020-2021. Ignoring these predictions may have severe consequences and we risk “stepping back in time” in AIDS-related deaths to numbers seen over a decade ago. Reflecting on our current experience of the COVID-19 pandemic in Uganda, we explore the potential impact of public health measures implemented to mitigate spread of COVID-19 on the HIV care continuum, and suggest areas of focus for HIV services, policy makers and governments to urgently address in order to minimise the collateral damage.
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来源期刊
AAS Open Research
AAS Open Research Multidisciplinary-Multidisciplinary
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
16
审稿时长
6 weeks
期刊最新文献
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