|
Agricultural intervention improves HIV outcomes
Helping HIV positive Kenyans improve farming practices counters hunger
18-Aug-2015 - A multifaceted farming intervention can reduce food insecurity while
improving HIV outcomes in patients in Kenya, according to a randomized, controlled trial led by
researchers at UC San Francisco.
The study found that participants in the intervention arm, who received agricultural and financial
support, were able to increase the quantity and quality of food consumed. At the same time, their
CD4 T-cell counts increased and their rate of viral suppression increased by about one half.
In contrast, both the CD4 cell counts and the rate of suppression fell for those in the control arm.
"While this was a pilot study, these results prove the concept that improving food insecurity and
alleviating poverty can affect HIV clinical outcomes," said the trial's co-primary investigator,
Sheri D. Weiser, MD, MPH, UCSF associate professor of medicine at the UCSF Division of HIV,
Infectious Diseases and Global Medicine at San Francisco General Hospital.
In sub-Saharan Africa, where 24.7 million people are living with HIV (71 percent of all people living
with HIV), 240 million people are food insecure. Food insecurity increases the risk of becoming
infected with HIV and food insecure people with HIV are less able to take anti-HIV therapies,
make clinic visits, and have poorer nutritional status. Together, those issues make
treating and preventing HIV more difficult, leading to sicker patients and more
deaths. In turn, once someone is infected with HIV, food insecurity gets worse
due to loss of economic activity and productivity, loss of social support
due to HIV stigma and the costs of medical care.
"HIV/AIDS and food insecurity are intertwined in a vicious cycle, with each increasing vulnerability
to and exacerbating the severity of the other," Weiser said. "We have the biomedical tools to treat
and prevent HIV, but we need interventions like this that combine healthcare with development,
and address food insecurity, poverty and disempowerment if we are to achieve the UNAIDS
goal of ending the HIV/AIDS epidemic by 2030."
The results of the trial are available online ahead of print in AIDS .
The trial, conducted over one year at two Family AIDS Care & Education Services (FACES) health
facilities in the Nyanza region in Kenya, enrolled 72 participants at one facility for the
intervention group and 68 at the other facility for the control group. Participants were
HIV positive individuals between 18 and 49 years old on anti-HIV therapy and all had
access to surface water for irrigation and land.
The intervention, titled Shamba Maisha, Swahili for "Farm Life," had three components. Microfinance
loans were provided by and managed by Adok Timo, a Kenyan microfinance organization, with support
from the two collaborating partners in FACES: UCSF and the Kenyan Medical Research Institute.
These loans were used to purchase farming implements and supplies along with manual
irrigation pumps designed by KickStart, a non-profit organization that develops
and markets new technologies that are used to establish new small businesses.
"The pumps make it possible for farmers to irrigate year round, which reduced dependence on seasonal
rainfalls. Producing food year round enables farmers to move from subsistence farming to commercial
farming and also allows them to capture higher crop prices during the dry season," said the
trial's co-primary investigator, Craig R. Cohen, MD, MPH, UCSF professor in the Bixby
Center for Global Reproductive Health in the department of obstetrics, gynecology
and reproductive sciences.
The third element was agricultural and financial management training. Agricultural training included
practical demonstrations on sustainable farming techniques, use of the water pump planting, soil and
water conservation, and integrated disease and pest management. Financial training focused on
record keeping, along with savings and investments.
"Shamba Maisha is the first trial to link agriculture with HIV outcomes," Cohen said. "The intervention
is unique in that it is sustainable, transformative and empowering. If you were to take away our
involvement tomorrow, the knowledge and materials to continue the livelihood intervention
would still exist in the community."
###
The trial's co-investigators are Elizabeth A. Bukusi, MBChB, M.Med, MPH, PhD, PGD and Elly Weke
from the Kenya Medical Research Institute; Edward A. Frongillo, PhD, from the University of
South Carolina; Kate Scow, PhD, from the University of California, Davis; Lisa M. Butler,
PhD, MPH, from Boston Children's Hospital; and Rachel L. Steinfeld, Shari L. Dworkin,
PhD, MS, Kyle Pusateri, and Stephen Shiboski, PhD, from UCSF.
Research reported in the publication was supported by the National Institute Of Mental Health of the
National Institutes of Health under Award Number 5R34MH094215. The content is solely the
responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views
of the National Institutes of Health.
In addition, this work was supported by the UC Global Health Institute (UCGHI) Center of Expertise in
Women's Health & Empowerment that strives to promote justice, equity and scientific advances to
reduce gender and health disparities globally. Through innovative research, education and
international collaboration, the Center builds and strengthens the capacity of the next
generation of leaders in women's health and empowerment.
UCSF researchers are affiliated with the AIDS Research Institute (ARI) at UCSF, which houses hundreds
of scientists and dozens of programs throughout UCSF and affiliated labs and institutions, making ARI
one of the largest AIDS research entities in the world. UCSF ranks #1 among medical schools in the
U.S. for its AIDS programs according to US News & World Report, as it has every year since
the category was created in 2001.
UC San Francisco (UCSF) is a leading university dedicated to promoting health worldwide through
advanced biomedical research, graduate-level education in the life sciences and health professions,
and excellence in patient care. It includes top-ranked graduate schools of dentistry, medicine,
nursing and pharmacy, a graduate division with nationally renowned programs in basic,
biomedical, translational and population sciences, as well as a preeminent
biomedical research enterprise and two top-ranked hospitals, UCSF Medical
Center and UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital San Francisco. Please visit http://www.ucsf.edu/news.
Media Contact
Jeff Sheehy
Jeff.Sheehy@ucsf.edu
415-845-1132
@ucsf
http://www.ucsf.edu
Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2015-08/uoc--aii081815.php
For more HIV and AIDS News visit...
Positively Positive - Living with HIV/AIDS:
HIV/AIDS News
|