Oh to be Born Free - without the Human Immunodeficiency Virus
December 17, 2011
Every child has the right to be born HIV negative, even though one or both of the parents may be living with HIV.
According to the UNAIDS 2011 report, there has been a 50% decline in the number of new HIV infections in India which
fell from 2.4% to around 1.21% in 2009. Yet we are far from achieving the UNAIDS goal of zero new infections, zero
deaths and zero discrimination by 2015. These goals were also at the centre of scientific deliberations at the ongoing
4th National Conference of AIDS Society of India (ASICON), which is being held at the Sanjay Gandhi Postgraduate
Institute of Medical Sciences, Lucknow, from 16th to 18th December.
New HIV infections can be controlled to a large extent by preventing parent to child transmission (PPTCT) of the HIV
virus during pregnancy, delivery or breastfeeding. Nearly 5% of infections in India are attributable to the vertical
route (parent to child transmission). It is estimated that in 2009, less than 25% of the number of pregnant women living
with HIV in India received anti-retroviral treatment to prevent parent-to-child transmission. National AIDS Control
Organisation (NACO) confirms that 18,000 children were infected with HIV from vertical route (parent to child
transmission) in 2009, although strategies to prevent them are very much available.
According to Dr Ishwar S Gilada, Secretary-General of AIDS Society of India (ASI), "It is a shame for us that we cannot
protect the rights and lives of our children. Zero new infections can become possible by preventing parent to child
transmission, where one can have 100% prevention in the child. Each of these survivals would amount to saving 68 years
of normal life, whereas by saving one adult we save only 10 to 15 years."
Dr Hoosen Coovadia, Scientific Director of Doris Duke Research Institute, Durban, also feels that the elimination of
parent to child transmission of HIV is a realisable goal in developing countries. According to him, "The effectiveness
of PPTCT interventions against HIV-1 is one of the greatest successes in the basket of prevention strategies used to
control the HIV epidemic. The benefits of intervention programmes directed at all three routes (in utero, during
delivery, and postnatal during breastfeeding) of transmission of HIV-1 are evident in industrialized countries where
transmission rates have fallen from about 25% to under 2% and survival of infants has increased. However in resource
poor settings PPTCT services are often unavailable or inaccessible. The use of artificial milk formulas instead of
breast milk to prevent postnatal HIV transmission, especially during the first 6 months of life is associated with
growth failure, high morbidity, malnutrition and even death."
In an exclusive interview to Citizen News Service (CNS), Dr Coovadia emphasized that, "It is not enough just to reduce
parent to child HIV transmission rates, but it is equally important to increase survival rate of infants. Children are
not just dying of HIV but also due to malnutrition, diarrhoea and pneumonia. Exclusive breastfeeding for the first six
months (followed by non-exclusive breastfeed till 18 months) is critical to the issue of survival and health of the
infants. One of the major advances made in recent years is in reducing HIV transmission through mother’s milk to very
low levels of just 1% to 2%."
Dr Coovadia recommended a combination of two drug therapy for preventing HIV transmission and improving survival - the
drug Zidovudine (AZT) during pregnancy and Nevirapine during delivery and for about 10 days after. To reduce breastfeed
transmissions either the mother can be given HAART (highly active antiretroviral), or Nevirapine can be given to the
baby for about 6 months. He prefers the second option as it is better and more cost effective.
Dr RR Gangakhedkar, Deputy Director of National AIDS Research Institute (NARI), an Indian Council of Medical Research
(ICMR) institute in Pune, and Dr Gilada also plead for a multidrug regimen instead of the outdated single dose
nevirapine which is currently used in the Indian government’s PPTCT programme. Dr Gilada laments that PPTCT programmes
are not very powerful in our country, and unless they shift to the two drug regimen, it would be very difficult to
achieve zero new infections. According to him a much better option is Lopanivar plus Ritonavir given in the last
trimester for 6 to 8 weeks offers 99% protection.
Let us hope that the National AIDS Cotnrol Organization (NACO) would bring about a qualitative as well as quantitative
change in its intervention programmes targeted at reducing transmission of infections to newborns. Of course, there is
no single magic bullet to curb the epidemic at large. So a cocktail approach will be needed, depending upon the targeted
populations which could be as varied as male/female sex workers, innocent housewives, migrant labour, injecting drug
users, men who have sex with men. But above all, we will have to bring about a social, economic and political
improvement in the lives of women, so that they are able to exercise greater control over their sexual and reproductive
health rights, and demand an end to the needless spread of this chronic infection.
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Shobha Shukla is the Managing Editor of Citizen News Service (CNS). She is a J2J Fellow of National Press Foundation (NPF) USA. She has worked earlier with State Planning Institute, UP
and taught physics at India's prestigious Loreto Convent. She also co-authored a book (translated in three languages)
"Voices from the field on childhood pneumonia" published in November 2011 and a report on Hepatitis C and HIV treatment
access issues in December 2011.