Voice of AmericaImportant note: Information in this article was accurate in 2009. The state of the art may have changed since the publication date.
Click here to return to Voice of America File main menu
DonateNow
Print this Article


The Challenge of Preventing Mother-to-Child Transmission of HIV in South Africa

Voice of America - October 27, 2009
Darren Taylor
Kwanyuswa village, Kwazulu-Natal, South Africa


Each year, half a million pregnant women in the developing world die of complications during childbirth, and about six million children are stillborn or die within a week of birth. For the next three weeks, we'll be looking at some of the factors that affect the chances of an African woman having a safe pregnancy and a healthy child.

This week, we'll hear from VOA's Darren Taylor in South Africa about some of the factors that can affect mothers and children after delivery, including AIDS alcohol, childhood diseases, breastfeeding practices and post-natal depression.

Amidst the emerald green, sugarcane-covered bluffs of South Africa's Kwazulu-Natal province, a feast is being prepared.

As the local men drink from golden bottles of beer in the murky shade of a wall, the silence is broken by women who begin to sing joyfully in a tent in the middle of the homestead.

The celebratory sheep slaughter and song are in honor of Cynthia Mkhize. Soon, she will be married.

"It is a fat one!" she gleefully exclaims, admiring the glassy-eyed carcass.

Mkhize has been living here, at Kwanyuswa village in the Valley of a Thousand Hills in South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province, all her life. She's 34 years old. She's the mother of six children.

KwaZulu-Natal is home to the country's Zulu people. It's one of South Africa's poorest areas, with high rates of unemployment and malnutrition. It's also the epicenter of the nation's HIV/AIDS epidemic.

One in four people here are HIV-positive. Mkhize is one of them.

The graveyards of rural KwaZulu-Natal are filled with the bodies of those who have succumbed to AIDS-related sicknesses.

"It's a curse!" Mkhize spits, carrying her four-year-old son, Bongamusa, a Zulu name meaning 'Thank the Lord.'

"But for now, I am okay. It is up to God to decide when to take me...." she contemplates, explaining that she was "sick a lot" when she fell pregnant with Bongamusa.

"I went to the counselors. They told me I was HIV-positive. My heart was broken," she whispers. "I thought it was over for me, but the doctors told me they could save me. They gave me the drug nevirapine."

Then, when Mkhize went into labor, she was given a combination of antiretroviral drugs, and this protected Bongamusa from HIV-infection.

"I am very happy that my child is HIV-negative. If I did not listen to the advice of the nurse, and take the drugs to prevent the virus from going into Bongamusa, none of us would be safe right now. Now we all have life," she smiles.

But according to Patience Mavata, a nurse and clinic manager in the valley, Mkhize's story is an unusual one. Mavata says one in three mothers who become pregnant in the district is HIV-positive, and most pass the virus on to their babies.

"Small battles are being won here and there, but the war is being lost. Some people now call this area 'the valley of a thousand deaths,'" says the young nurse.

The war Mavata speaks of is being fought on several fronts in KwaZulu-Natal. It's raging against certain aspects of culture that ensure that HIV is easily spread, against poverty that forces women into risky behavior, and against discrimination that results in people refusing to be tested for HIV.

No drugs

Prof. Hoosen Coovadia, one of South Africa's eminent HIV/AIDS scientists, says 60,000 HIV-positive babies are born every year in the country.

"Many of them are dying. Simple. And tragic. But that's the truth," he tells VOA.

Most fatalities occur in South Africa's most impoverished provinces, like KwaZulu-Natal.

Coovadia's frustrated.

"It's easy to save all these kid's lives, with just basic planning and correct allocation of resources," he maintains.

South Africa's the richest country in Africa. It has the 25th highest GDP in the world.... Yet its response to HIV/AIDS has thus far, according to Coovadia, been "embarrassing" when compared to efforts mounted against the disease in far poorer countries.

The pediatrician says, "There's been no political will in South Africa to really battle this epidemic."

A few years ago, the United States President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), gave Coovadia funds to test combinations of antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) in KwaZulu-Natal. He found the medicine reduced mother to child transmission of HIV to as low as one percent.

Coovadia says the drug combination needed to stop babies getting HIV costs "only a few dollars." Yet the doctor says HIV-positive mothers in many parts of South Africa don't have access to it. The country's Center for Actuarial Research has found that in some provinces, only one out of every ten HIV-positive pregnant women who need the medicines that would prevent their babies from being infected with HIV, are getting the drugs.

'It'll make you weep....'

For the president of the South African HIV Clinicians Society, Dr. Francois Venter, the answer to the question of why so many children are still being born HIV-positive in his homeland lies in the recent past.

"It's a legacy of our previous health minister, where she did everything in her power to create obstacles to access to antiretrovirals," he bluntly states.

South Africa's former health minister, Manto Tshabalala-Msimang, insisted that ARVs were "poisonous." Instead she promoted a diet of fruits and vegetables for HIV-infected people. AIDS activists, and a study done by Harvard University, say the South African government's initial refusal to provide the drugs in state clinics was responsible for the deaths of hundreds of thousands of HIV-infected people.

In 2004, the government began dispensing antiretrovirals after a successful court action by South African activists.

Coovadia says there are also other "massive deficits" in the country that result in HIV-positive pregnant women not getting medication and passing the virus to their babies.

"The key problem in Africa as a whole and in this country is the lack of infrastructure, which is sufficient clinics to provide coverage or sufficient professional personnel to run these clinics."

In the Valley of a Thousand Hills, nurse Mavata bemoans the fact that her clinic is "always so overburdened" with patients. Nevertheless, she's thankful, saying, "At least we do have something, rather than to have nothing, because there are areas where they've got nothing."

Mavata says clinics in KwaZulu-Natal are "few and far between.... Many people spend all day walking to and from" the facilities. "I don't know why the state doesn't build more. Ask them," she says.

Coovadia says mismanagement of the few health facilities there are also contributes to high HIV infection and death rates in South Africa.

"We don't have competent managers. They can't run hospitals. I have lived here all my life, and it's a disaster. They put people in positions of power, and if I told you the stories of what they get up to, it'll make you weep!"

Mavata says even if the women do get to the clinics to receive drugs, they live in such poor conditions that the medicine often becomes ineffective. Antiretrovirals must be kept cool.... But the tiny huts, with no electricity, are often heated by fire.

Says the nurse, "If the medicine is exposed to too much heat, it might not work by the time the person is using it. The women end up using useless medication."

Women are 'slaves' to men.... And circumstance

Mavata explains that a lot of the men in rural KwaZulu-Natal move to the urban centers to work, or to search for jobs, leaving the women alone in the villages. In the cities, the men have sex with other women.

"Our men, they prefer skin-on-skin sex.... Condoms they find less pleasurable," Mavata says.

The nurse knows of a wealthy man in the valley who is HIV positive but "hates" condoms.

"The man is a businessman. He's got power, he's got money. How many women does he sleep with to fulfill his desires?" she asks.

But Mavata stresses it's not only the men who are spreading HIV in the province. She says the women here are "totally economically disempowered" and are thus forced to rely "completely" on men for their needs. When their husbands or partners are away, the women require money for essentials and will look to other men to fulfill these needs.

"The women, because of poverty, they are looking for men that they can con, in order for them to live day by day."

And this "con," says Mavata, "equates to sex.... Women exchange sex for food, for presents, for a roof over their heads."

The nurse stresses that poverty encourages "dangerous" promiscuity, which in turn fuels the epidemic.

Mavata tells the story of a local woman who recently consulted her and told her, "I've got five men in my life. One is the father of my children. Two is the one that is giving me money for clothes. Three is the one that I enjoy sex with. Four is the one who helps me go on holiday. Five is the one who is popping up cash for my education."

Mavata exclaims, "It's all unprotected sex! How can we stop the spread of HIV in this context?"

When the women become HIV-infected, she says, they don't tell any of their male partners, because they fear rejection and consequent loss of income. When a man demands sex without a condom, Mavata explains, the women yield and don't inform the man that they're HIV-positive. And so the virus is transmitted "over and over and over again."

Many HIV-positive pregnant women in the valley also refuse to attend clinics, where they could be counseled on preventing transmission of the virus to their babies, because, says Mavata, "they know that as soon as they enter that clinic, people will know they are HIV-positive. Then I tell them, 'Don't let your feelings get in the way of saving your baby's life.'"

Some heed the nurse's advice. "Others don't," she says.

'Pregnant mothers are not the drivers of this epidemic!'

For Hoosen Coovadia, there's one "obvious" way to decrease the numbers of children being born with HIV in South Africa.

"You should start with the HIV-negative mother. If you kept women negative, there's going to be no babies (born) positive!"

The scientist says for the first time in South Africa, it's now possible to eliminate transmission of HIV to babies, with highly-active antiretroviral therapy. "But a lot more work needs to be done. We need trained counselors and more facilities. The money for this is there in state coffers, but it's not being used," Coovadia says.

He maintains that unless the South African government improves health services to enable more HIV-positive pregnant women to get drugs, thousands of children will continue to be born with the virus.

"How are we going to manage with all these children, say from two months (of age)?" Coovadia asks. "Can you imagine feeding this baby drugs - if it was your child - until the baby dies as an adult, for 20 years or 30 years? My God, it beggars the imagination. I don't know how we're going to manage it."

He's adamant that giving drugs to people, for a country with resources like South Africa, is the "easy part" of its response to HIV/AIDS.... The crucial and most complex part for the nation, the doctor insists, is ensuring that South Africans practice safer sex.

"Pregnant mothers are not the drivers of this epidemic. The big problem is heterosexual transmission. We can eliminate mother-to-child transmission and not affect transmission of HIV from men to women and women to men, one iota!" Coovadia says.

HIV/AIDS experts agree that South Africa has the scientific knowledge and the budget to prevent and treat HIV.

But, as Coovadia says, "You can throw all the money and knowledge in the world at the problem, but unless you have good political leadership, to ensure proper planning, you are finished. And unless we have somebody with imagination and dedication and understanding at the top, who drives this process, we'll have many, many unnecessary deaths."

Those embroiled in the battle against HIV/AIDS in South Africa are looking to the country's new president, Jacob Zuma, and new health minister, Aaron Motsoaledi, to radically revamp what they say has so far been a dire response to the pandemic.

But at the homestead at Kanyuswa village, the politics of South Africa's HIV/AIDS pandemic is far from Cynthia Mkhize's mind, as she enjoys the attention of women ululating in her honor. The HIV-positive bride-to-be smiles shyly. She thanks God again that her son has been born HIV-free. But then, unexpectedly, Mkhize whispers some words that destroy the assumption that hers will be a story with a happy ending.

"The man I am to marry, he is sure that he is HIV-positive. But he refuses to go for the HIV test. He says he will kill himself if he's positive. He now eats my pills...."

If this situation persists, says Mavata, Mkhize and her future husband won't take the levels of medication needed to enable them to fight off opportunistic illnesses. And her HIV-free children remain at high risk of being orphaned. If this happens, they'll be left to fend for themselves in the unforgiving climate that reigns in the Valley of a Thousand Hills.

"It won't happen, it won't happen," Mkhize shakes her head. "God is looking after us," she whispers, stroking her slumbering son's cheek.

091027
VA091010


Copyright © 2009 - Voice of America. You are welcome to use any material that is published by voanews.com, or you may link to any of the web pages that Voice of America has published on the internet. There is no need to request further permission. Should you wish to establish a link to any VOA web pages, please send your request to pubaff@ibb.gov. We would appreciate that credit for any use of VOA material be given to voanews.com, Voice of America, or VOA, and we ask that you not abridge or edit any VOA material which you may use.

AEGiS is a 501(c)3, not-for-profit, tax-exempt, educational corporation. AEGiS is made possible through unrestricted funding from the
Elton John AIDS Foundation, National Library of Medicine, AIDS Walk of Orange County, and donations from users like you
.

AEGiS presents published material, reprinted with permission and neither endorses nor opposes any material. All information contained on this website, including information relating to health conditions, products, and treatments, is for informational purposes only. It is not meant to be a substitute for the advice provided by your own physician or other medical professionals. This article first appeared in 2009. This material is designed to support, not replace, the relationship that exists between you and your doctor. Always discuss treatment options with a doctor who specializes in treating HIV.

Copyright ©1980, 2009. AEGiS. All materials appearing on AEGiS are protected by copyright as a collective work or compilation under U.S. copyright and other laws and are the property of AEGiS, or the party credited as the provider of the content. .