1. Current Status Towards 90-90-90 UNAIDS Target and Factors Associated with HIV Viral Load Suppression in Kediri City, Indonesia
- Author
-
Muhammad Atoillah Isfandiari, Geofrey Ssekalembe, and Hendick Suprianto
- Subjects
0303 health sciences ,Epidemiology ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,Dermatology ,030312 virology ,Body weight ,medicine.disease_cause ,medicine.disease ,Logistic regression ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Infectious Diseases ,Hiv test ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Virology ,Environmental health ,Test and treat ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Hiv status ,business ,Viral load - Abstract
Introduction In 2016, UN Member States committed to reduce new HIV infections to fewer than 500,000 annually by 2020, a 75% reduction compared with 2010, reduce AIDS-related deaths to fewer than 500,000 globally as a means of ending AIDS by 2030. The UNAIDS 2020 target is to have 90% of the people living with HIV know their status, 90% of the people living with HIV (who know their HIV status as positive) are already on ART treatment, 90% of people on treatment are virally suppressed. The objective of this study is to determine the current status towards the 2020 90-9-90 UNAIDS target and the factors associated with HIV viral load suppression in Kediri city. Methods The study was a cross-sectional study in Kediri city. The researcher collected secondary data, carried in-depth interviews, then determined the percentage of HIV-positive patients that did a HIV test and received their results as Positive, the percentage of HIV-positive patients that started ART treatment, the percentage of HIV-positive patients that have viral load suppression from the viral load tests done. A simple bivariate logistic and multivariate logistic regression was used to determine the significant factors that determine viral suppression. Results The progress towards the 90-90-90 UNAIDS target was at 6.4%, 74.9%, 9.9%. The time taken by the HIV-positive patient to start ART treatment from the time of confirmation of HIV positive (AOR= 83.191, CI: 1.617-4280.115) and decrease in body weight of the patient (AOR=29.636, CI: 1.193-736.167) were found to significantly influence viral load suppression. Conclusion There is a need to scale up HIV case-detection capacity through creating awareness about HIV, HIV testing and counselling and expand the ART services so as to achieve the 90-0-90 UNAIDS target. Early initiation to ART treatment (Test and Treat) and encouraging body gaining behaviors are needed to achieve viral load suppression.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF