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Donate today to support women in science at Burnet and their work to unlock the vaginal microbiome and reduce risk of HIV infection and preterm birth for women around the world.
Donate today to support women in science at Burnet and their work to unlock the vaginal microbiome and reduce risk of HIV infection and preterm birth for women around the world.
Background
Myanmar has the fourth highest number of people living with HIV in south-east Asia, with an estimated adult population prevalence of 0.57 per cent. It is estimated that 227,000 people are living with HIV in Myanmar, with the majority of cases among vulnerable populations of people who inject drugs, men who have sex with men and female sex workers. The Myanmar Ministry of Health and Sports has prioritised HIV as a key public health issue and is orchestrating responses through the National AIDS Program and collaborating international non-government organisations
Project Aim
ACCESS Myanmar will implement and evaluate an electronic health records data linkage system that effectively monitors the progress of patients through HIV testing and treatment episodes of care across a network of partnering community and government services.
Project Overview
ACCESS Myanmar will be established in a surveillance network of testing and treatment sites in the southern districts of Yangon.
The project will extract service-level patient data and link patient service access using anonymous patient codes generated on site using GRHANITE™ software installed at partnering services.
ACCESS Myanmar will enable the anonymous tracking of patients’ progress through the HIV cascade of care, including their repeated access to diagnostic testing and, for those diagnosed, attendance for follow-up care, anti-retroviral treatment (ART), and HIV viral suppression.
ACCESS Myanmar will contribute to the national and state-specific HIV response. Site specific reports will be used to identify areas for service improvements, while systems-level data will describe key HIV cascade of care indicators and estimates of HIV incidence in line with national HIV strategic priorities. By anonymously linking patients between and within services and over time, ACCESS offers an exciting potential as a research and evaluation platform to inform national strategic and disease elimination strategy.
For any general enquiries relating to this project, please contact:
Head, Public Health; Head, HIV Prevention Group; Co-Head, Justice Health Group