TY - JOUR
T1 - HIV/AIDS care and treatment in three provinces in northern Thailand before the national scale-up of highly-active antiretroviral therapy
AU - Thanprasertsuk, Sombat
AU - Lertpiriyasuwat, Cheewanan
AU - Leusaree, Tasana
AU - Sirinirund, Petchsri
AU - Sumanapan, Surin
AU - Chariyalertsak, Chonlisa
AU - Simmons, Nicole
AU - Ellerbrock, Tedd V.
AU - Siraprapasiri, Taweesap
AU - Yachompoo, Chiraporn
AU - Panputtanakul, Saowanee
AU - Virapat, Pongsri
AU - Supakalin, Panpaka
AU - Srithaniviboonchai, Kriengkrai
AU - Mock, Philip
AU - Supawitkul, Somsak
AU - Tappero, Jordan W.
AU - Levine, William C.
PY - 2006/1
Y1 - 2006/1
N2 - In 2003, Thailand launched a program to place 50,000 persons on highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) by the end of 2004, following a series of efforts since the early 1990s to develop comprehensive HIV/AIDS care services. To evaluate existing services and needs in advance of the national HAART scale-up, in 2002 we surveyed 31 hospitals and 389 community health centers in three northern Thai provinces, and interviewed 1,015 HIV-infected patients attending outpatient clinics. All hospitals offered voluntary HIV counseling and testing, 84% provided primary prophylaxis for Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, 58% for tuberculosis, 39% for cryptococcal meningitis, and 87% had some experience providing antiretroviral therapy. Community health centers provided more limited service coverage. Of patients interviewed, 63% had been diagnosed with symptomatic HIV disease, and of these, 32% reported ever receiving antiretroviral therapy; 51% of all patients had received a CD4 T-lymphocyte count. Thailand's current national HAART scale-up is being performed in a setting of well-developed hospital-based services introduced over the course of the epidemic.
AB - In 2003, Thailand launched a program to place 50,000 persons on highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) by the end of 2004, following a series of efforts since the early 1990s to develop comprehensive HIV/AIDS care services. To evaluate existing services and needs in advance of the national HAART scale-up, in 2002 we surveyed 31 hospitals and 389 community health centers in three northern Thai provinces, and interviewed 1,015 HIV-infected patients attending outpatient clinics. All hospitals offered voluntary HIV counseling and testing, 84% provided primary prophylaxis for Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, 58% for tuberculosis, 39% for cryptococcal meningitis, and 87% had some experience providing antiretroviral therapy. Community health centers provided more limited service coverage. Of patients interviewed, 63% had been diagnosed with symptomatic HIV disease, and of these, 32% reported ever receiving antiretroviral therapy; 51% of all patients had received a CD4 T-lymphocyte count. Thailand's current national HAART scale-up is being performed in a setting of well-developed hospital-based services introduced over the course of the epidemic.
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M3 - Article
C2 - 16771217
AN - SCOPUS:33744463366
SN - 0125-1562
VL - 37
SP - 83
EP - 89
JO - Southeast Asian Journal of Tropical Medicine and Public Health
JF - Southeast Asian Journal of Tropical Medicine and Public Health
IS - 1
ER -