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  Medicines to Africa: two perspectives  
         
 

Presbyterian AIDS Action promotes and supports programs and activities generated by our partner churches in Africa, which respond to their needs and priorities. Awareness raising, prevention efforts of many kinds, along with care for orphans and those infected and affected with HIV/AIDS create many opportunities for Presbyterians to respond to the AIDS crisis in Africa. However, medicines for the treatment of HIV/AIDS (Anti-Retroviral Therapy or ARVs) have not been requested by our partner churches.

That the leadership of our partner churches have not sought the help of PC(USA) in getting ARV drugs for their communities may be a reflection of the practical realities of administering and sustaining ARV therapy in many areas of sub-Saharan Africa. Dr. Sue Makin, a PC(USA) missionary formerly serving in the Democratic Republic of Congo and now in southern Malawi, described in a letter the stumbling blocks to an effective ARV therapy program in Malawi, where the infrastructure for a drug program may be better developed than in some other African nations.

"I am working as a Presbyterian missionary doctor in Malawi, a poor country in southern Africa where the prevalence of HIV/AIDS is quoted, by the Malawi Ministry of Health, to be 10% in rural areas and 25% in urban areas. Malawi is slated to receive up to $196,138,500.00 over the next five years from the Global Fund against AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria. As the Ministry of Health is able to account for the planning and execution of its program against HIV/AIDS, these funds will be released in a staged, yearly fashion.

 
     
  This paper is being written to expose some of the problems I feel we are facing even as we anticipate the arrival of large amounts of money to aid in alleviating our number one health problem. First of all, there is a tremendous shortage of trained health care providers in Malawi. There is one medical doctor for every 55,000 people in Malawi.  
     
 

There is a severe shortage of nurses, with a 25% shortage in government hospitals and 44% in mission hospitals. There is no end in sight for this shortage, and it may get worse as nurses are leaving Malawi to work in the United Kingdom for better salaries. Secondly, prescribing the anti-retroviral drugs in a safe, scientific, and rational manner requires a level of medical expertise and some medical laboratory services that are not available in the country at this time except in the two largest cities, Blantyre and Lilongwe.

Anti-retro viral medicines (ARV's) need to be taken for life. It is difficult for any person to take medicines every day for ten days, let alone every day for a month, or even every day for life. Many of the people in Malawi affected by the virus have a very limited formal educational background. Explaining and reinforcing the importance of continuing to take the medicine for life will be a very difficult and time-consuming task for the health care providers. Once someone stops taking the medicines that are keeping the HIV virus at bay, so to speak, and allowing the body's natural immune system to function normally, the virus will once again begin to replicate. Even worse, the form of the virus that comes back at this point may be resistant to any anti-retro viral drug available in Malawi. A person who stops taking ARV's can conceivably spread a resistant form of the virus to another person. At the present time in Malawi there are only two combinations of medicines available. There is Duovir, a two drug combination, and Triomune, a three drug combination. If a person has an adverse reaction to either of these two drugs, there is no alternative medicine at this time to give him or her. The only thing to do is to stop the medicine, which means the virus will begin to replicate one again in that person's body.

The ARV's are medicines that can cause some serious side effects such as inflammation of the liver or the pancreas, problems with nerves in the arms and legs, metabolic problems, and possibly a severe rash. If these problems occur then the medicines must be stopped. The people who will need the ARV's will conceivably be provided with the drugs for free through the Global Fund program. However, if these people live in an area remote from the distribution point of the medicines, some of them will not have the resources or the money to find transportation every month to get the medicines. A possible solution to this dilemma would be a get the medicines out to the people, but how to do that would require another layer of health care which does not exist at this time in Malawi. The distribution of drugs for tuberculosis now requires that the client return every month for the anti-TB medication for six months. ARV's are supposed to be for life.

These are some of my thoughts about the HIV/AIDS situation and anti-retro viral drugs in Malawi. We must not stop trying to prevent the spread of the virus through information, education, and counseling. The Christian churches in Malawi are being mobilized and I believe that they will become more and more active in the campaign. We still have a long way to go."

 
         
 

While PC(USA) is not directly involved in ARV treatment programs, we have a long-standing and valuable partnership with Interchurch Medical Assistance, an organization that is a member of the consortium that was recently awarded over $300 million to expand the delivery of ARVs to AIDS-stricken persons in seven African countries. The award is part of the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). PC(USA) is gratified that funding of that magnitude is being made available, and that faith based organizations such as IMA and another consortium member, Catholic Relief Services, will be an integral part of this massive PEPFAR program.

Read more about the PEPFAR grant, from a news release about the award.

 
         
 
 

Bible Studies in Congo Plant Seeds of Change

A project to write a Bible study guide for the Church Presbyterian Kinshasa (CPK), one of two PC(USA) partners in the Democratic Republic of Congo, has taken root from the work of the CPK AIDS Committee. With the help of PC(USA) AIDS Consultant for West and Central Africa, Caryl Weinberg, and two missionaries, Dave and Sally Ivaska, working with an international student organization, a group of men and women representing both the leadership and the general membership of CPK have organized weekly meetings to write a Bible study guide. The guide is being written around three major themes: Sexuality, The Church and Culture/Tradition, and The Church and AIDS.

 
         
  A recent meeting of the group included an inductive Bible study led by Sally Ivaska on "The Good Samaritan", relating it directly to AIDS. Caryl Weinberg reports that discussions among the group have been lively and intense, and touched on sensitive issues such as the need for behavior change among leaders in the church.   Two peopl discussing Bible passages
Pastor Kapinga (on left) and Flori, youth, (on right) discussing Bible passage. Photo credit Caryl Weinberg
 
         
  A women studying the Bible
Antoinette studying Bible. Photo credit Caryl Weinberg
  One study, on the topic of immorality, has been nearly completed. The group has committed to seek approval to lead group studies for church leaders at the next meeting of all CPK pastors. Their continuing work on the Bible study guide will be done in both French and Lingala, so that it is accessible to church members beyond the educated leadership. A PC(USA) congregation in the U.S., First P.C. of Arlington Heights, Illinois, was involved through a visiting group last fall with the initial meetings of the group.  
         
  The work of the group has already produced a living example of the relevance of Scripture to every day life. The day after studying the Good Samaritan story, Caryl Weinberg accompanied a pastor who had participated in the Bible study, on a home visit to a member of his congregation, a widow with AIDS. The woman sent Caryl and the pastor to see her neighbor who had helped her-a sick woman, abandoned by   Group photo in the Congo
Group gathered to write Bible study guide for the Church Presbyterian Kinshasa (CPK), Democratic Republic of Congo. Photo credit Caryl Weinberg
 
         
 

her family, who was trying desperately to care for two small children by herself. The woman lived within a few hundred feet of both the CPK Health Center and a CPK church, yet no one from the congregation had been asked to help her, or even visit and pray with her. Why?, Caryl asked. Because the woman was not a member of that congregation.

Later Caryl repeated this incident in light of the Good Samaritan story to the study group. "Although shocking to them," Caryl wrote, "I think it reinforced the need to change the culture in a concrete way."
 
         

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For more information on International Health Ministries contact Toni Roppel - click here to email or write her at 100 Witherspoon Street, Louisville, KY, 40202-1396. Or Call (888) 728-7228, x5279

 
     
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