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      Evaluation of a 5-year programme to prevent mother-to-child transmission of HIV infection in Northern Uganda.

      Journal of Tropical Pediatrics
      Adult, Anti-HIV Agents, therapeutic use, Counseling, Female, HIV Infections, drug therapy, prevention & control, transmission, HIV-1, Humans, Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical, statistics & numerical data, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Male, Middle Aged, Mothers, Postnatal Care, utilization, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious, epidemiology, Prenatal Care, Retrospective Studies, Rural Population, Treatment Outcome, Uganda, Young Adult

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          Abstract

          Prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT) is essential in HIV/AIDS control. We analysed 2000-05 data from mother-infant pairs in our PMTCT programme in rural Uganda, examining programme utilization and outcomes, HIV transmission rates and predictors of death or loss to follow-up (LFU). Out of 19,017 women, 1,037 (5.5%) attending antenatal care services tested HIV positive. Of these, 517 (50%) enrolled in the PMTCT programme and gave birth to 567 infants. Before tracing, 303 (53%) mother-infant pairs were LFU. Reasons for dropout were infant death and lack of understanding of importance of follow-up. Risk of death or LFU was higher among infants with no or incomplete intrapartum prophylaxis (OR = 1.90, 95% CI 1.07-3.36) and of weaning age <6 months (OR 2.55, 95% CI 1.42-4.58), and lower in infants with diagnosed acute illness (OR 0.30, 95% CI 0.16-0.55). Mother-to-child HIV cumulative transmission rate was 8.3%, and 15.5% when HIV-related deaths were considered. Improved tracking of HIV-exposed infants is needed in PMTCT programmes where access to early infant diagnosis is still limited.

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