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Browsing by Subject "Antiretroviral Treatment"

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    Providing antiretroviral treatment for all who need it in South Africa
    (2003) Nattrass, Nicoli; Geffen, Nathan
    In August 2003, the South African government announced its support for the provision of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) in the public sector. This was a major break-through (antiretrovirals are now explicitly recognised as beneficial) but the Cabinet statement was very cautiously worded about actual implementation. The Ministry of Health has been instructed to develop a 'detailed operational plan' but it is increasingly clear that one of the major constraints on the scale and pace of the roll-out will be the amount of resources allocated to it. Given the discourse of 'unaffordability' which has dogged South African AIDS policy making over the past five years (Nattrass, 2004 forthcoming) it is likely that South Africa will opt for a limited intervention on the grounds that resources are best spent elsewhere.
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    What Determines Cross-Country Access to Antiretroviral Treatment?
    (Wiley, 2006) Nattrass, Nicoli
    Despite the recent international effort to expand access to highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) in developing countries, its coverage still varies significantly from country to country and is strongly correlated with per capita income. However, regional and political variables are also important. Cross-country regressions indicate that, controlling for political and economic characteristics and the scale of the HIV epidemic, Latin American and African countries have better coverage than predicted. Whereas the level of HIV prevalence was a significantly (negative) factor when accounting for HAART coverage in June 2004, this effect had disappeared by December 2004. The improvement appears to have benefited democratic countries in particular.
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