Blandine
Mekpo, a midwife at a maternity ward, provides information about AIDS to
pregnant women in Bohicon, southern Benin ©Delphine Bousquet (AFP)
|
Pregnant with her fourth
child in a clinic in Benin, Rosine is relieved to learn that she does not have
AIDS, after a free test considered a national health priority.
AFP
report continues:
"I
was afraid the test would be positive. My husband is a driver, you know,"
the woman in her 40s told AFP at the maternity clinic in the small town of
Bohicon, where she was screened.
For
15 years, authorities in Benin have sought to tackle mother-to-child
transmission of HIV with free care, from the initial tests to antiretroviral
(ARV) drugs if a patient proves seropositive.
A
programme that covers 87 percent of the public and private maternity clinics in
the small west African country has been a success, cutting the rate of
mother-to-child transmission almost by half between 2012 and 2016, from 14
percent of cases to 7.6 percent.
"This
is completely integrated into maternal care, it's routine," said Blandine
Mekpo, who has been a midwife for 11 years. "All the women who come in for
a prenatal consultation agree to the test."
Elise
cradles her little son in her arms. Fifteen months ago, the young mother
learned that she was infected with HIV. The clinic at once provided her with a
free box of ARV drugs, which worked. Her child of six months does not have the
virus.
"This
is a great joy," Elise says. "The treatment saved me, they saved my
son and my husband. He is the only one to know. I live a normal life, like all
women and all mothers."
Medical
staff will nonetheless continue to monitor Elise's son until he is 18 months
old.
"When
a mother takes ARVs, she doesn't transmit the virus to her child, neither
during pregnancy nor at birth, nor while breast-feeding," Mekpo points
out. The risk of transmission is less than one percent, compared with a risk of
35 percent in the absence of preventive treatment.
At
1.2 percent across Benin, the rate of HIV-positive people is low by African
standards.
Of
every hundred births recorded at the Bohicon clinic during a month, two mothers
on average have proved seropositive. But during the entire year, only one child
was subsequently infected.
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Get the men involved -
Several
factors contribute to such good results, with free provision of screening and
care at the top of the list. The UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) provides test
kits, while the Global Fund against AIDS, TB and Malaria provides ARV therapy.
In
Bohicon, the drugs are now stored on hospital premises. "Before, there was
a risk of running out because everything was stocked in Cotonou," the
economic capital on the Gulf of Guinea, said Nicole Paqui, the doctor heading
up UNICEF's AIDS programme.
"Today,
test kits and medication are available in permanent fashion in all the public
health zones," she added.
Training
for nurses and care assistants has helped to make maternity clinics friendlier places
to welcome mothers. AIDS has become less of a taboo subject and health workers
no longer take fright when a new case is detected.
But
in Bohicon as elsewhere, difficulties arise for medical and social reasons.
Some patients give up on treatment because of unpleasant side-effects, while
others shrug off their HIV-positive status for fear of being stigmatised.
Money
can also be a problem, for instance whenever a man refuses to pay for his wife
to travel to the maternity clinic.
Female
mediators help to overcome such obstacles by accompanying women during the
medical process. "When they notice that some women are no longer
attending, they go out to their homes to fetch them," said the head
coordinator of health care in the area, Blaise Guezo-Mevo.
Seventy
percent of the women concerned are found. "And when we recover them, we
don't lose them again," the doctor added.
In
mid-November, the ministry of health launched an ambitious campaign to bring
the rate of mother-to-child transmission of HIV down below five percent in the
next four years.
If
this goal is to be achieved, men have to be brought into the process. "The
involvement of spouses is indispensable," Paqui said.
"When
the man is informed and supportive of his spouse, she'll go all the way. But if
she has to hide, the protocol is not effective."
Elise
is one of the lucky ones. Her husband came to take a test, which proved
negative, and he is ready to fetch drugs for her from the clinic.
"Screening husbands is
still difficult," Mekpo says. "Yet screening is a matter for
couples."
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