In September 2020, Eswatini became the first country in Africa to achieve the United Nations HIV targets with 96% of people living with HIV aware of their status, 94% on antiretroviral therapy (ART), and 91% virally suppressed. The imminence of these milestones placed sustained epidemic control firmly in the nation’s reach, and strategies had to evolve accordingly. The Eswatini HIV Prevention and Clinical Services (EHPCS) project served to foster epidemic control by addressing the remaining barriers to prevention and treatment continuity. This required the use of technically sound, coordinated approaches that were linked high-level objectives and complimented national strategic plans.
Explore Related Resources
Journal Articles
Birth Defects and Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes in Hospital-based Birth Surveillance in Eswatini
Published February 2025
Background The Botswana Tsepamo study identified an initial neural tube defect (NTD) safety signal with dolutegravir antiretroviral therapy (ART) exposure at conception. We conducted similar surveillance in 5 hospitals in Eswatini from September 2021 to September 2023 to evaluate the prevalence of birth defects and adverse pregnancy outcomes by maternal HIV status and ART regimen/timing. […]
View Resource
Countries:
Eswatini
Journal Articles
An integrated, multidisciplinary management team intervention to improve patient‑centeredness, HIV, and maternal‑child outcomes in Lesotho
Published December 2024
Background Reducing perinatal HIV transmission and optimizing maternal and child health (MCH) outcomes in high HIV prevalence settings is an urgent, but complex, priority. Extant interventions over-emphasize individual-level provider and patient behaviors, and neglect critical health systems-level changes. The ‘Integrated Management Team to Improve Maternal-Child Outcomes (IMPROVE)’ study implemented a three-part, patient-centered, health-systems- level intervention […]
View Resource
Topics:
Maternal and Child Health
Countries:
Lesotho
Journal Articles
Effect of integrating paediatric tuberculosis services into child healthcare services on case detection in Africa
Published December 2024
Introduction Paediatric tuberculosis (TB) underdiagnosis is a critical concern. The INPUT stepped-wedge cluster-randomised trial assessed the impact of integrating child TB services into child healthcare on TB case detection among children under age 5 years. Methods We compared the standard of care, providing TB care in specific TB clinics (control phase), with the Catalysing Paediatric […]
View Resource
Topics:
Tuberculosis (TB)
Countries:
Cameroon,
Kenya