Please note - this is a temporary window. id21 is joining forces with Eldis and therefore the id21 website has been suspended. Soon all id21 content will be available on the Eldis website.
Tuberculosis (TB) and HIV and AIDS affect each other strongly. Control programmes for the two diseases should also interact. This paper explores options for linking TB and HIV and AIDS programmes, concluding that a universal model is unlikely to suit all contexts.
The paper identifies six contextual factors that affect collaboration between HIV and AIDS and TB disease programmes: social and cultural factors; epidemiology and disease control; economic and financial flows; politics; ideology and values; and international factors. The authors analyse the impact of epidemiology and disease control factors on collaborative strategies, highlighting the following issues:
There are various options for structuring the relationship between disease control activities. The first is to integrate HIV and AIDS and TB control activities into general health services. This offers a patient-centred approach, with better efficiency and reduced costs. A second approach is to merge HIV and AIDS and TB control activities into a joint programme, while the third option keeps the two programmes separate. Collaboration can then take the form of:
Possible impacts of these choices include loss of external funding, reduced effectiveness, increased workload, interruptions to service delivery, inconsistencies between separate protocols and difficult supervision. More policy analysis and research is needed on these organisational options and the possible impact of change.
Source(s):
‘HIV/AIDS and TB: contextual issues and policy choice in programme
relationships’, Tropical Medicine and International Health, 12 (2): 183-194,
by Y. Wang et al., 2007
id21 Research Highlight: 5 April 2008
Further Information:
Yan Wang
Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine
Pembroke Place
Liverpool
L3 5QA
UK
Tel:
+44 (0)151 7053196
Fax:
+44 (0)151 7053364
Contact the contributor: yan.wang@liverpool.ac.uk
Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine (LSTM), UK
Other related links:
'Public-private partnerships: potential for health equity in India'
'HIV-related TB deaths: impact of joined-up programmes in Estonia'
'Providing care in South Africa - lessons from TB/HIV pilot districts'