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Rural ARV clinics for a cool ten million |
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Written by Administrator
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Friday, 30 October 2009 10:08 |
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A new anti-retroviral therapy clinic opened this Friday at the Okongo Hospital some 80km from Eenhana in the Ohangwena region. The ARV clinic is funded by the US government under its PEPFAR funding programme. Four more ARV clinics are in the pipeline under the same tranche of funding. The clinic was officially opened by Minister of Health and Social Services, Dr Richard Kamwi. Matt Harrington of the US embassy in Windhoek represented the donor. The Okongo ARV clinic is one of five currently renovated with N$10,909,573 in funding from the US government through the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention and the President’s Emergency Fund for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). Research and the conducting of feasibility studies on these five projects started in 2002. Renovation of the clinics was approved in January 2007, and construction began on the Okongo project in the second half of 2008. PEPFAR contributed N$2,076,509 to the Okongo project. The Namibian office of the CDC Global AIDS Programme was launched in September 2002. CDC assists the Ministry of Health and Social Services in countering the HIV epidemic. The Centre further works to reduce HIV transmission and provide treatment and care for those already infected with HIV and tuberculosis (TB). It provides extensive technical expertise to help increase laboratory capacity to support anti-retroviral therapy (ARV), prevention of mother-to-child transmission early infant diagnosis, and TB diagnosis. Since 2000, the US government has supported Namibia’s efforts to build effective, community-based responses to the HIV/AIDS epidemic. All activities in Namibia supported by PEPFAR are guided by the government of Namibia’s National Strategic Plan on HIV/AIDS, which defines its strategy to combat the epidemic.
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