Stock-outs of antiretroviral (ARV) drugs in recent years in the Central African Republic have had a dramatic impact on the health of HIV-infected people, says Pierre-Marie David.

However, ARV distribution has created disappointment equal to the high expectations it initially raised.
On the one hand, free access to ARVs offered the possibility of living better with HIV, which as a result, became a treatable infection like others. On the other hand, carriers of the virus were less stigmatized by the population, and the availability of medications resulted in a doubling in the number of pregnant women agreeing to be tested for HIV (20,000 in 2008 vs. 40,000 in 2009). But the management of funds – US $43 million – was centralized by an unprepared state apparatus. The distribution networks that existed before free access disappeared, leaving a monopoly system that had become corrupt.
So much so that, from 2008 to 2010, the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria sporadically froze payments to ensure greater traceability. The supply of ARVs was affected, resulting in stock-outs that sometimes lasted more than two months in areas of the country with more than 220,000 HIV-infected people.Biological and social resistance
Noting the extent of the problem when he returned to Bangui in 2010, David reframed his work to include the individual and social effects of treatment discontinuation. "Paradoxically, these shortages, in both real and symbolic terms, were a death sentence for those whom the drugs were supposed to save," he says.On the one hand, many patients suffered virologic failure (or treatment failure) due to the strategies they used to compensate for a lack of ARVs. "For example, some people took their medications only every other day so they would have some left over in case of a shortage, while others relied on local healers in the absence of treatment," recalls David.Such strategies likely increased the risk of drug resistance.
On the other hand, treatment interruptions were also interpreted by patients as a betrayal of those responsible for international programs. "In addition to biological resistance, I also noted social resistance, indeed a kind of cynicism," explains David. "And if, in ten years, we decide to give them second or third generation drugs to treat drug resistance, we will first have to ask how the development of new programs will be interpreted."
About the situation in the Central African RepublicSince 2013, the Central African Republic has engaged in its third civil war, caused primarily by problems of governance that have degenerated into communal conflict between Christians and Muslims in a region greatly destabilized by fighting in Darfur and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and the spread of armed militias over a large part of the area.
The situation deeply concerns David, not only because of the additional difficulties it raises for ARV distribution, but also because of the situation of survival it has created for the entire population. "Access to ARV treatment becomes problematic in the context of daily survival in a country that already generates little interest," he laments, recalling that less than 40% of basic humanitarian needs are currently filled. A call for international commitment.
Source-Eurekalert
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