Making HIV programmes work

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HEINEKEN International Making HIV programmes work The Heineken HIV programme- First ten years

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Making HIV programmes work. The Heineken HIV programme- First ten years. Heineken’s HIV programme. Last century sickness and death for African workers: Malaria under control Diarrheal diseases under control Upper respiratory infection : under control Cause of death : AIDS . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Making HIV programmes work

Page 1: Making HIV programmes work

HEINEKEN International

Making HIV programmes workThe Heineken HIV programme- First ten years

Page 2: Making HIV programmes work

Heineken’s HIV programme

♦ Last century sickness and death for African workers:■Malaria under control■Diarrheal diseases under control■Upper respiratory infection : under control■Cause of death : AIDS

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Price of the drugs

♦ Accelerated Access Initiative♦ Generic Producers

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Obstacles in 2000

♦ Life long commitment of care

♦ Price and continuous supply of the drugs

♦ Quality assurance of the care provided

♦ Laboratory expertise

♦ Compliance by the patients

♦ Possible low uptake out of fear of discrimination by employer

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HEINEKEN

♦ 90 000 employees globally♦ 11700 employees in Africa and

Middle East♦ 30 000 employees and

dependants covered in health care program

♦ 15 doctors, ♦ 45 nurses, ♦ 4 lab techs, ♦ 1 pharmacist

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Expertise of care providers

♦Define treatment protocols and training needs

♦Training courses for doctors and nurses♦Mentoring by teleconferences and database♦Organisation of refresher courses

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Compliance and continuity

♦Workplace allows for excellent compliance: active tracing

♦Choose the best drugs, not the cheapest

♦No interruption in drug supply

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Laboratory Capacity and Quality Control

♦Invest in technology

♦Invest in training

♦Building quality cycles

♦External quality surveillance

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Stigma and discrimination : determinants of uptake of testing

♦Engage the top managers : General Manager and HR manager

■Do as you have promised -- Show the example

♦Confidentiality of medical information. ♦Uptake of VCT:

■Hesitating start, first the sick people■After 3 years approaching 80-95%

(c) Getty- A GBC member company

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Causes of stigma

Figure 1 Cognitive-emotional model of HIV-related stigma. Adapted from Dijker & Koomen in 2003 (Bos, Schaalma & Pryor, 2008)

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Low level of stigmatisation

♦Priority for Heineken to target stigma in these countries?

study countryS1

Mean

Genberg, 2009

Tanzania 1.66Thailand 1.35Zimbabwe 1.23Vulinlela (SA) 0.93Soweto (SA) 0.79

De Jong, 2010

DRC 0.57Burundi 0.32

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Employee Mortality 1999-2007Great Lakes Countries.

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Immediate result

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After 10 years still new infections

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New cases detected in Heineken Opcos

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Summary of the research

♦ HIV treatment programmes in the private sector can effectively keep workers and family members alive.

♦ Uptake of voluntary counselling and testing showed that employees will trust employers if action reinforces words.

♦ Cooperation with non-governmental actors can help a company acquire necessary expertise that is not part of the core knowledge

♦ Short training courses and continuous mentorship of health care providers can address quality concerns and accelerate start-up of a treatment programme.

♦ Price of medicines was an important trigger to be able to start a treatment programme.

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Fighting HIV in the supply chain

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Key accomplishments

♦ 19 SCC adopted a HIV/AIDS workplace policy;

♦ 19 SCC have active HIV/AIDS committees;

♦ The top managers of the SCC are becoming

increasingly supportive and engaged;

♦ 167 peer educators have been trained;

♦ IEC materials distributed;

♦ Employees have improved access to condoms;

♦ 819 employees received HCT and HIV-positive

clients were referred to care and treatment;

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The future of HIV prevention and treatment programmes.

♦ Competition for diminishing funds for global health♦ Employers should not offload their problem on the public sector but

seek genuine cooperation and contribute towards a solution♦ Opportunities to try different approaches to be more effective and

efficient. ♦ Involving supply chain♦ HIV prevention and treatment need sustained efforts for the

foreseeable future.♦ Needs will increase during the next years

■More demand of HIV infected■Resistance

● Better and more expensive drugs ■Treatment as prevention

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♦Thank you

♦ (NB no conflicts of interest)