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Population Services International

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Title: Population Services International


1
Population Services International
  • Measurable
  • Health
  • Impact
  • Drives Everything
  • We Do

635,000 HIV infections prevented
5.4 million pregnancies averted
45.8 million malaria episodes thwarted
7.4 million diarrhea cases avoided
15.9 million multivitamin pills marketed
2
  • . . . . AND 10,099 cases of TB patients on DOTS
    treatment to date, generating over 66,995 PYPS.

3
Tuberculosis An Ancient Disease
The Heidelberg Man An Egyptian Mummy
4
What is Tuberculosis?
  • TB is caused by bacteria called Mycobacterium
    tuberculosis
  • Spread by coughing and sneezing (air born
    droplets)
  • TB is deadly
  • However, TB is curable
  • Treatment Prevention

5
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6
TB Common Symptoms
  • Active (pulmonary) TB
  • bad cough, lasts 2 weeks
  • pain in chest
  • coughing up blood or sputum
  • skin test (usually)
  • may have abnormal chest X-ray, and/or
    sputum smear or culture
  • highly contagious each person with active
    sputum smear positive TB estimated to infect 10
    -15 people in a year.
  • Latent TB
  • usually no symptoms
  • do not feel sick
  • skin test (usually)
  • normal chest X-ray and sputum test
  • not contagious
  • with normal immune system, only 5-10 of people
    with latent TB will ever get Active TB

7
Lungs of a TB Patient
8
Even Though Curable, TB Still Kills People Today
9
Top 12 Causes of Death Worldwide
  • Ischemic Heart Disease (Heart Attacks, Heart
    Failure)
  • Cerebrovascular Accidents (Strokes)
  • Lower Respiratory Infections (Mostly pneumonia)
  • HIV/AIDS
  • Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
  • Perinatal Conditions
  • Diarrheal Diseases
  • TB
  • Malaria
  • Lung Cancers
  • Road Accidents
  • Diabetes

10
TB A Global Emergency
  • has killed over 1 billion people
  • kills between 2-3 million people/year (over
    5,000 per day)
  • will kill more this year than ever
  • 1/3 of the worlds population is infected
  • 16 18 million have active TB disease
  • 75 of cases currently not tested
  • resistance to drugs increasing

11
TB A Global Emergency
  • 1 global killer of young women (age 15-45)
  • gt100,000 children will die from TB this year
  • A disease of the poor 95 of those who develop
    active TB 98 of those who die of TB are in the
    developing world

12
TB is the leading single infectious cause of
death in South-East Asia
Number of deaths (1000s)
Deaths from infectious agents in South-East Asia
Source WHO 2000
13
TB is a Leading Killer of Women
Deaths among women
Source WHO 2000
14
TB HIV Cruel Collaboration
  • TB is the leading cause of death for
    people with AIDS
  • 16.3 million people have both TB HIV
    (co-infection)
  • HIV infection results in active TB
  • TB may accelerate the clinical course of HIV
    infection
  • TB/HIV co-infection concentrated in Africa

15
Solution TB Prevention and Treatment DOTS
  • DOTS Directly Observed Therapy, Short Course
  • 5 components of DOTS
  • Detection (sputum smear microscopy)
  • standardized, directly observed treatment
    (direct observation for at least 2 months,
    treatment for another 4-6 months)
  • reliable supply of high quality drugs
  • accountability and a standardized reporting
    system
  • political commitment

16
TB Prevention and Treatment DOTS
  • Detection by sputum smear microscopy
  • Standardized, directly observed treatment
    with combination of 4-6 drugs
  • Isoniazid
  • Rifampicin
  • Streptomycin
  • Pyrazinimide
  • Ethambutol
  • Thioacetezone

17
Why DOTS?
  • Economical - treatment costs only 5-20/person
  • Effective - cure rates over 90 possible, even in
    poorest countries
  • Helps prevent multiple drug resistance
  • Governments who commit to DOTS have access to
    free drugs Global Drug Facility

18
TB High-Burden Countries
Top 10
Pakistan Philippines Ethiopia South Africa Russia
India China Indonesia Nigeria Bangladesh
DR Congo Vietnam Kenya Brazil Tanzania
Thailand Mozambique Myanmar UgandaAfghanistan
Zimbabwe Cambodia
Source WHO 2002
19
Where in the World Is PSI? TB Overlap!
Pakistan Panama Paraguay Peru Romania Russia Rwand
a South Africa Swaziland Tajikistan Tanzania Thail
and Togo Trinidad Tobago Uganda USA Uzbekistan V
enezuela Zambia Zimbabwe
Eritrea Ethiopia Guatemala Guinea Guyana Haiti Hon
duras India Kazakhstan Kenya Kyrgyzstan Laos Lesot
ho Macedonia Madagascar Malawi Mali Mexico Mozambi
que Myanmar Namibia Nepal Nicaragua Nigeria
Afghanistan Angola Belize Benin Bolivia Bosnia/Her
zegovina Botswana Bulgaria Burkina
Faso Burundi Cambodia Cameroon Central African
Republic China Congo-Brazzaville
(RC) Congo-Kinshasa (DRC) Costa Rica Cote
dIvoire Croatia Cuba Dominican
Republic Ecuador El Salvador
20
TB Why PSI? Well, one reason, is that we are
already there
  • PSI operates in 17 of the 22 WHO / Stop TB High
    Burden Countries, which account for 80 of the
    worlds TB cases
  • PSI has working VCT franchises in African
    countries where HIV/TB co-infection rates are
    high
  • PSI has health franchises in Asia where TB rates
    are high and patient seek care in private sector
  • TB often concentrated in same high-risk groups
    that PSI already works with daily

21
PSI TB Competitive Edge
  • motivating healthy behavior change
  • tackling highly stigmatized disease
  • involving the private sector
  • creating incentives for compliance
    (patient provider)
  • providing high quality services and information
  • logistics expertise and experience

22
Roles for PSI in the Fight Against TB
  • FRANCHISING
  • Integrate TB prevention and treatment into PSI
    social franchises where patients seek care in the
    private sector
  • COMMUNICATIONS
  • Promote DOTS centers, encourage earlier
    diagnosis, increase compliance, and reduce TBs
    stigma among communities and providers
  • VCT Linkages
  • Integrate TB screening, referral, and prevention
    into PSI Voluntary Counseling Testing centers
    where HIV/TB co-infection is high Promote
    counseling and testing of TB patients Integrate
    TB into post test services

23
Social Franchising to Stop TB
  • Myanmar
  • incorporating DOTS into Sun Quality Health
    Network and improving health seeking behavior
    (Donors Global Fund, DF, and now DFID)
  • supporting World TB Day (Donor WHO/Stop TB)
  • Pakistan
  • incorporating DOTS into Greenstar network (Donor
    Global Fund)
  • outreach and IPC

24
PSI TB Treatment and Prevention in the Private
Sector
  • PSIs first TB Social Franchising project in
    Myanmar launched in 2004 expected to serve 5,000
    TB patients being treated under DOTS within Sun
    Quality Health franchise
  • Targets
  • 1,000 TB patients cured by December 2004 (3,000
    more after the end of the project)
  • 40,000 new TB infections averted by June 2005
    (based on WHO-endorsed standard multiplier)
  • First demonstration of how DOTS might work in PSI
    franchises lessons learned about what will work
    best.

25
Encouraging results
  • 220 private SQH GPs trained in DOTS in 49
    townships
  • More than 7 private labs trained and accredited
  • 8,602 cases detected to date 40 new smear
    positive
  • SQH now contributes 21 of total new sputum smear
    positive cases in areas where we are active.
  • 84 treatment success rate for new smear
    positives (WHO target is 85) 92 for new smear
    negative pulmonary and extra pulmonary cases and
    73 for retreatment cases

26
Case detection in the SQH Network
27
Impact on Case Detection
Trend of DOTS case notification rates of all new
smear positive cases in SQH townships and control
townships.
28
Reaching the Poor
29
GreenStar Pakistans Program
  • Identify and train private providers
  • Recruit and train field staff, including
    treatment supporters
  • Develop and market a TB-DOTS treatment package
  • Develop a targeted BCC strategy to support the
    social marketing approach
  • Implement DOTS through the social franchise and
    referral network
  • Conduct monitoring and evaluation of the strategy
    effectiveness

30
The CatchChallenges of Implementation
  • Requires heavy government involvement
  • Complicated technical intervention that requires
    expertise/time
  • No quick easy test for TB, no quick easy cure
    compliance is an ongoing issue for all programs
  • Doing no harm should apply if you cant do it
    well, dont. MDR TB is a real threat for poorly
    performing programs.

31
PSI and TB Communications
32
PSI TB The Role for Social Marketing
Communications
  • Create demand for highly stigmatized
    service/product
  • Reduce stigma of disease
  • Increase awareness/knowledge of DOTS testing and
    treatment centers
  • Combat sense of hopelessness let community (
    providers!) know cure is possible even if HIV
    positive
  • Increase compliance with medications knowledge
    that completion of full regime is key
  • Market/promote fixed dose combination drug (PSI
    may use over branded blister packs to increase
    compliance enhance ease of use.)

33
PSI Communications Working to Stop TB
  • Myanmar with Global Funds PSI DF as part of
    Social Franchising project within Sun Quality
    Health Care network
  • Pakistan with Global Funds to support new TB
    project within Greeenstar franchise
  • Kenya with CDC funding to support government
    DOTS centers
  • Laos Global Fund to support DOTS at government
    sites
  • Others to follow Cambodia Nepal? Namibia?
    Nigeria? South Africa?

34
World AIDS Day 2003PSI Collaborated with WHO
in Myanmar to Promote DOTS
  • Communication Objectives
  • Awareness
  • Detection
  • Treatment
  • Reduce Stigma

35
Myanmars New TV Mass Media Promotion for DOTS
36
Integrating TB VCT ServicesTB HIV Cruel
Collaboration
  • TB is the leading cause of death for
    people with AIDS
  • 16.3 million people have both TB HIV
  • HIV infection leads to active TB
  • TB accelerates the clinical course of HIV
    infection
  • TB/HIV co-infection concentrated in Africa

37
PSI TB and HIV
  • TB activities can be incorporated within VCT
    by
  • Promoting and providing TB education and training
    wherever HIV services are delivered
  • Increasing screening and case finding of active
    TB among HIV positive VCT clients referral of
    active cases to TB DOTS diagnosis and treatment
    sites other HIV positive to IPT programs
  • Providing VCT services to TB patients through
    mobile services, training of counselors,
    referrals
  • Providing TB preventive therapy (IPT) to persons
    living with HIV/AIDS and co-infected with TB
  • Incorporating TB education/services into post-test

38
Benefits of TB Screening inVCT Setting
  • Provides opportunity to diagnose and treat large
    number of individuals with active TB
  • Patients with possibly active infections of TB
    can be segregated from other VCT clients, many of
    whom are HIV
  • HIV patients in whom active TB has been excluded
    can benefit from Isoniazid prophylaxis (IPT)
  • In process of screening for TB, patients with
    bacterial pneumonia may be diagnosed and treated

39
Conclusions
  • TB is a major global killer
  • TB is curable
  • Social marketing has various applications that
    can be tailored to country needs
  • PSI has experience, capacity, and on the ground
    presence to effectively join the fight against TB
  • For more information please contact Shannon
    England or Dvora Joseph
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