{"title":"建设,而不是拆除:在资金变化中利用差异化的服务提供方法,产生更广泛的卫生影响","authors":"Anna Grimsrud, Charles B. Holmes, Linda Sande","doi":"10.1002/jia2.26514","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>“<i>It is so easy to break down and destroy. The heroes are those who make peace and build</i>.”—Nelson Mandela</p><p>We received over 100 abstracts in response to this supplement's call for evidence to advance the scale-up of differentiated service delivery (DSD) beyond HIV treatment. However, since January 2025, the global context for HIV service delivery has shifted dramatically.</p><p>A steep, sudden reduction in United States government funding has jeopardised HIV services in many high-burden countries [<span>1</span>]. The closure of United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and termination of President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) programming delivered through USAID partners [<span>2</span>] marks more than a bureaucratic reshuffle—it signals the potential unravelling of critical components of the global HIV response.</p><p>While a State Department waiver was intended to provide clarification to allow for life-saving humanitarian assistance, it failed to deliver, resulting in widespread disruption of HIV services, including life-saving treatment [<span>3</span>]. The punative choices reflected in the waiver also reveal a fundamental shift in the scope of U.S. support going forward. The cessation of most pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) programmes (except for pregnant and breastfeeding women), removal of earmarked funding for key populations and orphans and vulnerable children, and the elimination of HIV survey, surveillance and community-led monitoring activities underscore the magnitude of the shift. These changes threaten to dismantle the very structures built to make HIV care more efficient, client-centred and resilient. Among them is DSD—an approach that has transformed HIV services and remains key to sustaining and expanding access amid shrinking resources.</p><p>Prior to 20 January 2025, DSD had been scaled and integrated into national guidance, especially in Eastern and Southern Africa. Data from the Coverage, Quality and Impact Network (CQUIN) network of 21 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa show that by 2023, a median of 76% of people on antiretroviral therapy (ART) accessed treatment through a less-intensive DSD model [<span>4</span>]. Multi-month dispensing (MMD) of ART, which expanded during COVID-19 [<span>5</span>], is an enabler of DSD. Scale-up of MMD has continued, with 45% of people on ART supported by PEPFAR outside of South Africa, or 6.67 million people, receiving 6MMD in July−September 2023 (personal communication, Lauren Bailey). The potential savings from DSD include cost and resource savings from less frequent clinic visits, both for clients and the health system [<span>6, 7</span>], and can increase human resource capacity [<span>8</span>].</p><p>During COVID-19, the World Health Organization (WHO) recommended DSD components to support uninterrupted access to services: MMD of ART, MMD and prescribing of PrEP, scaled provision of HIV self-testing and ART distribution through community distribution points [<span>9</span>]. While these elements remain relevant, the current trend is moving in the wrong direction—ART refill durations are being shortened [<span>10, 11</span>], community distribution points are dismantled and group models phased out with reduced healthcare worker funding, especially for lay cadres.</p><p>This supplement is more timely and relevant than ever. DSD adapts care around client needs—a flexibility that is essential in an era of austerity. In the face of funding cuts, DSD provides not a fallback plan, but a forward-looking strategy. Since its articulation nearly a decade ago [<span>12</span>], DSD has focused on client-centredness, grounded in the assumption that those who are clinically stable and treatment literate can be seen less frequently and will seek care when needed. DSD aligns with self-care principles and ensures that resources are available when intensified care is required.</p><p>Crucially, DSD is not HIV-specific. It offers a scalable framework for managing other chronic conditions and co-morbidities among people living with HIV [<span>13</span>]. In today's resource-constrained environment, the principles of DSD—client-centredness, efficiency, flexibility—are not just relevant, but essential. Rather than dismantling the DSD framework, we should build upon it to support an integrated HIV service delivery model for the future.</p><p>This supplement demonstrates how DSD can go beyond sustaining HIV treatment. It can be a foundation for integrated chronic care, a model for resilience in fragile systems and a mechanism to safeguard key populations from being left behind. DSD offers a way to keep people at the centre and to build health systems from the ground up—efficiently, equitably and sustainably. The supplement includes research across four key themes.</p><p>The first theme is on DSD for HIV treatment alongside the integration of other health needs. Articles in this section explore how DSD can be used to deliver integrated care—for example, combining HIV treatment with hypertension or diabetes management. Three papers—Kiggundu et al. [<span>14</span>], Hickey et al. [<span>15</span>] and Pascoe et al. [<span>16</span>]—highlight the successes of integrating hypertension and HIV care within DSD models. In Uganda, Kiggundu et al. randomised clinics to implement hypertension screening and treatment into their HIV DSD models [<span>14</span>]. There were large numbers of people living with HIV with undiagnosed hypertension, 85% of the 3164 people with HIV and hypertension were newly diagnosed in the study. Presenting a mixed-methods study, integration was concluded to be feasible and adaptable facilitated by the availability of resources and synchronisation of HIV and hypertension visits. In South Africa, Pascoe et al. reviewed the already integrated DSD approach in the country assessing the alignment of medication visits and dispensing intervals for people living with HIV and hypertension from 18 public sector clinics across models of service delivery [<span>16</span>]. The results highlight high degrees of alignment with facility visits and medication pick-ups, 94% and 95%, respectively, and no increase in visit burden for co-morbid clients. In the SEARCH study from Kenya and Uganda, Hickey et al. present an alternative approach to leveraging existing Ministry of Health staff to integrate HIV and non-communicable disease care [<span>15</span>]. They show how Ministry of Health community health workers can effectively deliver integrated HIV and hypertension services at the community level, with active linkages to nearby health facilities. The magnitude of the chronic disease risk among people living with HIV in South Africa was described by Sahu et al. in the Kwa-Zulu Natal province [<span>17</span>]. Among those in a community-based ART model, nearly a quarter of participants smoked (24%), had hypertension (23%) and half (50%) were obese. These data highlight the urgent need to address both the prevention and treatment of chronic conditions among people living with HIV. It is encouraging to see growing opportunities and the increasing feasibility of integrating HIV care alongside common co-morbidities.</p><p>The second theme examines how the DSD approach is being applied to other chronic conditions, with two papers on DSD for tuberculosis (TB), drawing lessons from HIV service delivery informing design and scale-up. In a discrete choice experiment (DCE), Strauss et al. found strong preferences for DSD among people with TB in the Eastern Cape province in South Africa, with three classes of preferences—community-based, clinic-based and group-models [<span>18</span>]. In Ferroussier-Davis et al., outcomes among people living with TB accessing care and treatment through different DSD models in Uganda are presented, demonstrating the feasibility of both facility- and community-based DSD models beyond HIV [<span>19</span>].</p><p>The need and the practical potential of extending DSD models to often-overlooked populations is the third theme. In Hicks et al., results from implementing a risk assessment tool to adapt care for adolescents and young adults living with HIV in Kenya demonstrates that low-intensity models can be provided to adolescents and young adults living with HIV without additional loss to follow-up or viral non-suppression [<span>20</span>]. In the low HIV prevalence setting of Cambodia, Yam et al. highlight that a community ART delivery model implemented during COVID-19 was cost-effective in reducing the decline in physical health in people living with HIV [<span>21</span>]. Bothma et al. present experiences of healthcare workers delivering a DSD model to trans clients [<span>22</span>]. They demonstrate the need for tailored transgender services as transgender clients continue to face negative experiences when seeking care in standard service delivery facilities. This evidence is particularly crucial in the current climate of shifting funding priorities that represent a major threat to person-centred services for key populations. Another DCE from Australia assessed preferences among gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men and highlighted the diverse preferences for the delivery of sexual health and PrEP services [<span>23</span>].</p><p>In addition to the work of Ong et al., DSD for PrEP emerged as the final theme of this supplement and is also the focus of Musheke et al. and Owidi et al. [<span>24, 25</span>]. In Zambia, Musheke et al. highlight the extended reach of PrEP for adolescent girls and young women in Zambia with decentralisation of PrEP services [<span>24</span>]. Similarly, Owidi et al. present the perspectives of both clients and providers in a pharmacy-based PrEP programme, another intervention adapting the “where” building block of service delivery to expand access to PrEP [<span>25</span>].</p><p>Beyond these themes, Fernández Villalobos et al. present the scale of global ART DSD implementation prior to COVID-19 across 175 facilities, offering a rare and valuable insight into its scope [<span>26</span>]. This information is particularly relevant for decision-makers, especially in the context of limited resources, where there is a continued need to decongest facilities and prioritise care for clients requiring the most provider attention. And finally, in a viewpoint, Wilkinson et al. summarise the need for differentiation at re-engagement, and the policy work done in South Africa and Zimbabwe to develop re-engagement algorithms [<span>27</span>]. In both examples, the algorithms are designed both to support those with increased clinical needs and to enable rapid access to less-intensive DSD models to support sustained engagement.</p><p>In the face of a precipitous decline in U.S. funding and an uncertain global funding context, HIV services are being reshaped at an alarming speed. This supplement offers timely, practical evidence to support ministries of health and finance, implementers and advocates in rethinking how HIV services are delivered. Amid this upheaval, DSD—including beyond HIV treatment—remains one of our strongest tools to sustain the impact of HIV response and uphold the premise of people at the centre. In addition, enablers of DSD such as MMD are particularly important now, as they can be cost-saving for clients and resource saving for the health systems [<span>34</span>] during a period of increased resource constraint. We must resist the impulse to retreat and instead build on the innovations already in place. Yet, without deliberate intention and sustained commitment, DSD risks becoming a casualty of the current funding crisis. It is not only worth protecting; it is essential to the future of the HIV response and part of the antidote. We cannot allow short-term decisions to unravel years of progress. Now is the time to build—not dismantle.</p><p>The authors declare no competing interests.</p><p>AG wrote an initial outline of the Editorial and the first draft. CBH and LS reviewed and added content. All authors approved the final version of the manuscript.</p>","PeriodicalId":201,"journal":{"name":"Journal of the International AIDS Society","volume":"28 S3","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":4.9000,"publicationDate":"2025-07-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/jia2.26514","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Build, do not dismantle: leveraging a differentiated service delivery approach for broader health impact amidst funding changes\",\"authors\":\"Anna Grimsrud, Charles B. Holmes, Linda Sande\",\"doi\":\"10.1002/jia2.26514\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>“<i>It is so easy to break down and destroy. The heroes are those who make peace and build</i>.”—Nelson Mandela</p><p>We received over 100 abstracts in response to this supplement's call for evidence to advance the scale-up of differentiated service delivery (DSD) beyond HIV treatment. However, since January 2025, the global context for HIV service delivery has shifted dramatically.</p><p>A steep, sudden reduction in United States government funding has jeopardised HIV services in many high-burden countries [<span>1</span>]. The closure of United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and termination of President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) programming delivered through USAID partners [<span>2</span>] marks more than a bureaucratic reshuffle—it signals the potential unravelling of critical components of the global HIV response.</p><p>While a State Department waiver was intended to provide clarification to allow for life-saving humanitarian assistance, it failed to deliver, resulting in widespread disruption of HIV services, including life-saving treatment [<span>3</span>]. The punative choices reflected in the waiver also reveal a fundamental shift in the scope of U.S. support going forward. The cessation of most pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) programmes (except for pregnant and breastfeeding women), removal of earmarked funding for key populations and orphans and vulnerable children, and the elimination of HIV survey, surveillance and community-led monitoring activities underscore the magnitude of the shift. These changes threaten to dismantle the very structures built to make HIV care more efficient, client-centred and resilient. Among them is DSD—an approach that has transformed HIV services and remains key to sustaining and expanding access amid shrinking resources.</p><p>Prior to 20 January 2025, DSD had been scaled and integrated into national guidance, especially in Eastern and Southern Africa. Data from the Coverage, Quality and Impact Network (CQUIN) network of 21 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa show that by 2023, a median of 76% of people on antiretroviral therapy (ART) accessed treatment through a less-intensive DSD model [<span>4</span>]. Multi-month dispensing (MMD) of ART, which expanded during COVID-19 [<span>5</span>], is an enabler of DSD. Scale-up of MMD has continued, with 45% of people on ART supported by PEPFAR outside of South Africa, or 6.67 million people, receiving 6MMD in July−September 2023 (personal communication, Lauren Bailey). The potential savings from DSD include cost and resource savings from less frequent clinic visits, both for clients and the health system [<span>6, 7</span>], and can increase human resource capacity [<span>8</span>].</p><p>During COVID-19, the World Health Organization (WHO) recommended DSD components to support uninterrupted access to services: MMD of ART, MMD and prescribing of PrEP, scaled provision of HIV self-testing and ART distribution through community distribution points [<span>9</span>]. While these elements remain relevant, the current trend is moving in the wrong direction—ART refill durations are being shortened [<span>10, 11</span>], community distribution points are dismantled and group models phased out with reduced healthcare worker funding, especially for lay cadres.</p><p>This supplement is more timely and relevant than ever. DSD adapts care around client needs—a flexibility that is essential in an era of austerity. In the face of funding cuts, DSD provides not a fallback plan, but a forward-looking strategy. Since its articulation nearly a decade ago [<span>12</span>], DSD has focused on client-centredness, grounded in the assumption that those who are clinically stable and treatment literate can be seen less frequently and will seek care when needed. DSD aligns with self-care principles and ensures that resources are available when intensified care is required.</p><p>Crucially, DSD is not HIV-specific. It offers a scalable framework for managing other chronic conditions and co-morbidities among people living with HIV [<span>13</span>]. In today's resource-constrained environment, the principles of DSD—client-centredness, efficiency, flexibility—are not just relevant, but essential. Rather than dismantling the DSD framework, we should build upon it to support an integrated HIV service delivery model for the future.</p><p>This supplement demonstrates how DSD can go beyond sustaining HIV treatment. It can be a foundation for integrated chronic care, a model for resilience in fragile systems and a mechanism to safeguard key populations from being left behind. DSD offers a way to keep people at the centre and to build health systems from the ground up—efficiently, equitably and sustainably. The supplement includes research across four key themes.</p><p>The first theme is on DSD for HIV treatment alongside the integration of other health needs. Articles in this section explore how DSD can be used to deliver integrated care—for example, combining HIV treatment with hypertension or diabetes management. Three papers—Kiggundu et al. [<span>14</span>], Hickey et al. [<span>15</span>] and Pascoe et al. [<span>16</span>]—highlight the successes of integrating hypertension and HIV care within DSD models. In Uganda, Kiggundu et al. randomised clinics to implement hypertension screening and treatment into their HIV DSD models [<span>14</span>]. There were large numbers of people living with HIV with undiagnosed hypertension, 85% of the 3164 people with HIV and hypertension were newly diagnosed in the study. Presenting a mixed-methods study, integration was concluded to be feasible and adaptable facilitated by the availability of resources and synchronisation of HIV and hypertension visits. In South Africa, Pascoe et al. reviewed the already integrated DSD approach in the country assessing the alignment of medication visits and dispensing intervals for people living with HIV and hypertension from 18 public sector clinics across models of service delivery [<span>16</span>]. The results highlight high degrees of alignment with facility visits and medication pick-ups, 94% and 95%, respectively, and no increase in visit burden for co-morbid clients. In the SEARCH study from Kenya and Uganda, Hickey et al. present an alternative approach to leveraging existing Ministry of Health staff to integrate HIV and non-communicable disease care [<span>15</span>]. They show how Ministry of Health community health workers can effectively deliver integrated HIV and hypertension services at the community level, with active linkages to nearby health facilities. The magnitude of the chronic disease risk among people living with HIV in South Africa was described by Sahu et al. in the Kwa-Zulu Natal province [<span>17</span>]. Among those in a community-based ART model, nearly a quarter of participants smoked (24%), had hypertension (23%) and half (50%) were obese. These data highlight the urgent need to address both the prevention and treatment of chronic conditions among people living with HIV. It is encouraging to see growing opportunities and the increasing feasibility of integrating HIV care alongside common co-morbidities.</p><p>The second theme examines how the DSD approach is being applied to other chronic conditions, with two papers on DSD for tuberculosis (TB), drawing lessons from HIV service delivery informing design and scale-up. In a discrete choice experiment (DCE), Strauss et al. found strong preferences for DSD among people with TB in the Eastern Cape province in South Africa, with three classes of preferences—community-based, clinic-based and group-models [<span>18</span>]. In Ferroussier-Davis et al., outcomes among people living with TB accessing care and treatment through different DSD models in Uganda are presented, demonstrating the feasibility of both facility- and community-based DSD models beyond HIV [<span>19</span>].</p><p>The need and the practical potential of extending DSD models to often-overlooked populations is the third theme. In Hicks et al., results from implementing a risk assessment tool to adapt care for adolescents and young adults living with HIV in Kenya demonstrates that low-intensity models can be provided to adolescents and young adults living with HIV without additional loss to follow-up or viral non-suppression [<span>20</span>]. In the low HIV prevalence setting of Cambodia, Yam et al. highlight that a community ART delivery model implemented during COVID-19 was cost-effective in reducing the decline in physical health in people living with HIV [<span>21</span>]. Bothma et al. present experiences of healthcare workers delivering a DSD model to trans clients [<span>22</span>]. They demonstrate the need for tailored transgender services as transgender clients continue to face negative experiences when seeking care in standard service delivery facilities. This evidence is particularly crucial in the current climate of shifting funding priorities that represent a major threat to person-centred services for key populations. Another DCE from Australia assessed preferences among gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men and highlighted the diverse preferences for the delivery of sexual health and PrEP services [<span>23</span>].</p><p>In addition to the work of Ong et al., DSD for PrEP emerged as the final theme of this supplement and is also the focus of Musheke et al. and Owidi et al. [<span>24, 25</span>]. In Zambia, Musheke et al. highlight the extended reach of PrEP for adolescent girls and young women in Zambia with decentralisation of PrEP services [<span>24</span>]. Similarly, Owidi et al. present the perspectives of both clients and providers in a pharmacy-based PrEP programme, another intervention adapting the “where” building block of service delivery to expand access to PrEP [<span>25</span>].</p><p>Beyond these themes, Fernández Villalobos et al. present the scale of global ART DSD implementation prior to COVID-19 across 175 facilities, offering a rare and valuable insight into its scope [<span>26</span>]. This information is particularly relevant for decision-makers, especially in the context of limited resources, where there is a continued need to decongest facilities and prioritise care for clients requiring the most provider attention. And finally, in a viewpoint, Wilkinson et al. summarise the need for differentiation at re-engagement, and the policy work done in South Africa and Zimbabwe to develop re-engagement algorithms [<span>27</span>]. In both examples, the algorithms are designed both to support those with increased clinical needs and to enable rapid access to less-intensive DSD models to support sustained engagement.</p><p>In the face of a precipitous decline in U.S. funding and an uncertain global funding context, HIV services are being reshaped at an alarming speed. This supplement offers timely, practical evidence to support ministries of health and finance, implementers and advocates in rethinking how HIV services are delivered. Amid this upheaval, DSD—including beyond HIV treatment—remains one of our strongest tools to sustain the impact of HIV response and uphold the premise of people at the centre. In addition, enablers of DSD such as MMD are particularly important now, as they can be cost-saving for clients and resource saving for the health systems [<span>34</span>] during a period of increased resource constraint. We must resist the impulse to retreat and instead build on the innovations already in place. Yet, without deliberate intention and sustained commitment, DSD risks becoming a casualty of the current funding crisis. It is not only worth protecting; it is essential to the future of the HIV response and part of the antidote. We cannot allow short-term decisions to unravel years of progress. Now is the time to build—not dismantle.</p><p>The authors declare no competing interests.</p><p>AG wrote an initial outline of the Editorial and the first draft. CBH and LS reviewed and added content. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
“它很容易分解和破坏。英雄是那些缔造和平和建设的人。——纳尔逊·曼德拉我们收到了100多份摘要,这些摘要响应了本期增刊呼吁的证据,以推动扩大艾滋病毒治疗以外的差异化服务提供(DSD)的规模。然而,自2025年1月以来,艾滋病毒服务提供的全球环境发生了巨大变化。美国政府资金突然大幅减少,危及了全球许多高负担国家的艾滋病服务。美国国际开发署(USAID)的关闭和由USAID合作伙伴提供的总统艾滋病紧急救援计划(PEPFAR)项目的终止不仅标志着官僚机构的重组,而且标志着全球艾滋病应对工作的关键组成部分可能出现解体。虽然国务院的豁免是为了提供澄清,以便提供挽救生命的人道主义援助,但它未能实现,导致艾滋病毒服务大面积中断,包括挽救生命的治疗[3]。豁免中所反映的惩罚性选择也揭示了美国未来支持范围的根本转变。大多数暴露前预防(PrEP)规划(孕妇和哺乳期妇女除外)的停止,取消了为重点人群、孤儿和弱势儿童提供的专项资金,以及取消了艾滋病毒调查、监测和社区主导的监测活动,这些都突显了这一转变的重要性。这些变化有可能破坏为使艾滋病毒护理更有效、以客户为中心和更有弹性而建立的结构。其中包括dsd,这一方法改变了艾滋病毒服务,在资源不断减少的情况下,仍然是维持和扩大可及性的关键。在2025年1月20日之前,特别是在东部和南部非洲,发展可持续发展已被扩大并纳入国家指导。覆盖撒哈拉以南非洲21个国家的覆盖、质量和影响网络(CQUIN)的数据显示,到2023年,接受抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)的人中有76%通过强度较低的DSD模式获得治疗。在2019冠状病毒病疫情期间扩大的ART的多月分配(MMD)是DSD的推动者。MMD的规模继续扩大,在南非以外的地区,45%接受抗逆转录病毒治疗的人,即667万人,在2023年7月至9月期间接受了600万MMD治疗(个人通信,Lauren Bailey)。DSD的潜在节省包括减少门诊就诊次数所节省的成本和资源,对客户和卫生系统都是如此[6,7],并且可以增加人力资源能力bb0。在2019冠状病毒病期间,世界卫生组织(世卫组织)推荐了DSD组成部分,以支持不间断地获得服务:抗逆转录病毒药物的烟雾防治、烟雾防治和PrEP处方、大规模提供艾滋病毒自我检测以及通过社区分发点分发抗逆转录病毒药物。虽然这些因素仍然相关,但目前的趋势正在朝着错误的方向发展——抗逆转录病毒治疗的补充时间正在缩短[10,11],社区分发点被拆除,随着卫生保健工作者(尤其是非专业干部)资金的减少,群体模式逐步淘汰。这份增刊比以往任何时候都更加及时和相关。DSD以客户需求为中心,这种灵活性在经济紧缩的时代是必不可少的。面对资金削减,DSD提供的不是后备计划,而是前瞻性战略。自近10年前制定以来,DSD一直专注于以客户为中心,基于这样一种假设,即那些临床稳定且懂治疗的人可以不那么频繁地就诊,并且在需要的时候会寻求治疗。本署奉行自我照顾原则,并确保在需要加强照顾时提供资源。关键是,DSD不是hiv特异性的。它为管理艾滋病毒感染者的其他慢性疾病和合并症提供了一个可扩展的框架。在当今资源受限的环境中,以客户为中心、效率、灵活性等原则不仅相关,而且至关重要。我们不应拆除可持续发展框架,而应在此基础上为未来的艾滋病毒综合服务提供模式提供支持。本补充说明了DSD如何能够超越持续的艾滋病毒治疗。它可以成为综合慢性护理的基础,脆弱系统的复原力模型,以及保护关键人群不掉队的机制。DSD提供了一种将人置于中心并从头开始建立卫生系统的方法——高效、公平和可持续。增刊包括四个关键主题的研究。第一个主题是艾滋病毒治疗与综合其他卫生需求的可持续发展。本部分的文章探讨了如何使用DSD提供综合护理,例如,将HIV治疗与高血压或糖尿病管理相结合。kiggundu et al. [14], Hickey et al.[14]和Pascoe et al. 3篇论文。 [16] -强调将高血压和艾滋病毒护理纳入DSD模式的成功。在乌干达,Kiggundu等人随机选取了一些诊所,在其HIV DSD模型中实施高血压筛查和治疗[14]。大量艾滋病病毒感染者未确诊高血压,在3164名艾滋病病毒和高血压患者中,85%是新诊断的。提出了一项混合方法研究,结论是整合是可行的和适应性的,促进了资源的可用性和同步的艾滋病毒和高血压就诊。在南非,Pascoe等人审查了该国已经采用的综合DSD方法,评估了18个公共部门诊所中艾滋病毒和高血压患者就诊和配药间隔的一致性。结果突出了与设施访问和药物提取的高度一致性,分别为94%和95%,并且没有增加共病客户的访问负担。在肯尼亚和乌干达的SEARCH研究中,Hickey等人提出了一种利用现有卫生部工作人员整合艾滋病毒和非传染性疾病护理bbb的替代方法。它们显示了卫生部社区卫生工作者如何能够在社区一级有效地提供艾滋病毒和高血压综合服务,并与附近的卫生设施建立积极联系。南非夸祖鲁-纳塔尔省的Sahu等人描述了艾滋病毒感染者中慢性疾病风险的严重程度[10]。在以社区为基础的抗逆转录病毒治疗模式中,近四分之一的参与者吸烟(24%),患有高血压(23%),一半(50%)肥胖。这些数据突出表明,迫切需要预防和治疗艾滋病毒感染者的慢性疾病。令人鼓舞的是,将艾滋病毒护理与常见合并症结合起来的机会越来越多,可行性也越来越高。第二个主题探讨了如何将可持续发展战略方法应用于其他慢性病,其中有两篇关于结核病的可持续发展战略的论文,从艾滋病毒服务提供中吸取教训,为设计和扩大提供信息。在离散选择实验(DCE)中,Strauss等人发现南非东开普省的结核病患者对DSD有强烈的偏好,有三种偏好——基于社区的、基于诊所的和群体模式[18]。Ferroussier-Davis等人介绍了乌干达通过不同的DSD模式获得护理和治疗的结核病患者的结果,证明了设施和社区DSD模式在艾滋病毒感染范围之外的可行性。第三个主题是将DSD模型扩展到经常被忽视的人群的需要和实际潜力。在Hicks等人的研究中,在肯尼亚实施风险评估工具以适应对感染艾滋病毒的青少年和年轻人的护理的结果表明,可以向感染艾滋病毒的青少年和年轻人提供低强度模型,而不会增加随访或病毒非抑制bb0的损失。在柬埔寨艾滋病毒流行率较低的环境中,Yam等人强调,在COVID-19期间实施的社区抗逆转录病毒治疗提供模式在减少艾滋病毒感染者身体健康状况下降方面具有成本效益。Bothma等人介绍了医疗工作者向跨性别客户交付DSD模型的经验[10]。由于跨性别客户在标准服务提供机构寻求治疗时仍然面临负面经历,因此它们表明需要量身定制的跨性别服务。这一证据在当前供资重点转移的环境下尤其重要,这对为关键人群提供以人为本的服务构成了重大威胁。来自澳大利亚的另一项DCE评估了同性恋、双性恋和其他男男性行为者的偏好,并强调了提供性健康和预防服务的不同偏好。除了Ong等人的工作外,PrEP的DSD是本增刊的最后一个主题,也是Musheke等人和Owidi等人的研究重点[24,25]。在赞比亚,Musheke等人强调了通过PrEP服务的分散化,将PrEP扩大到赞比亚的少女和年轻妇女。同样,Owidi等人提出了以药房为基础的PrEP规划的客户和提供者的观点,这是另一项干预措施,调整了服务提供的“地点”构建块,以扩大PrEP的可及性。除了这些主题之外,Fernández Villalobos等人还介绍了在COVID-19之前175个设施中全球ART DSD实施的规模,并对其范围提供了罕见而有价值的见解。这一信息对决策者尤其重要,特别是在资源有限的情况下,在这种情况下,继续需要减少设施的拥挤,并优先照顾需要最多提供者关注的客户。最后,在一个观点上,威尔金森等人。
Build, do not dismantle: leveraging a differentiated service delivery approach for broader health impact amidst funding changes
“It is so easy to break down and destroy. The heroes are those who make peace and build.”—Nelson Mandela
We received over 100 abstracts in response to this supplement's call for evidence to advance the scale-up of differentiated service delivery (DSD) beyond HIV treatment. However, since January 2025, the global context for HIV service delivery has shifted dramatically.
A steep, sudden reduction in United States government funding has jeopardised HIV services in many high-burden countries [1]. The closure of United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and termination of President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) programming delivered through USAID partners [2] marks more than a bureaucratic reshuffle—it signals the potential unravelling of critical components of the global HIV response.
While a State Department waiver was intended to provide clarification to allow for life-saving humanitarian assistance, it failed to deliver, resulting in widespread disruption of HIV services, including life-saving treatment [3]. The punative choices reflected in the waiver also reveal a fundamental shift in the scope of U.S. support going forward. The cessation of most pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) programmes (except for pregnant and breastfeeding women), removal of earmarked funding for key populations and orphans and vulnerable children, and the elimination of HIV survey, surveillance and community-led monitoring activities underscore the magnitude of the shift. These changes threaten to dismantle the very structures built to make HIV care more efficient, client-centred and resilient. Among them is DSD—an approach that has transformed HIV services and remains key to sustaining and expanding access amid shrinking resources.
Prior to 20 January 2025, DSD had been scaled and integrated into national guidance, especially in Eastern and Southern Africa. Data from the Coverage, Quality and Impact Network (CQUIN) network of 21 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa show that by 2023, a median of 76% of people on antiretroviral therapy (ART) accessed treatment through a less-intensive DSD model [4]. Multi-month dispensing (MMD) of ART, which expanded during COVID-19 [5], is an enabler of DSD. Scale-up of MMD has continued, with 45% of people on ART supported by PEPFAR outside of South Africa, or 6.67 million people, receiving 6MMD in July−September 2023 (personal communication, Lauren Bailey). The potential savings from DSD include cost and resource savings from less frequent clinic visits, both for clients and the health system [6, 7], and can increase human resource capacity [8].
During COVID-19, the World Health Organization (WHO) recommended DSD components to support uninterrupted access to services: MMD of ART, MMD and prescribing of PrEP, scaled provision of HIV self-testing and ART distribution through community distribution points [9]. While these elements remain relevant, the current trend is moving in the wrong direction—ART refill durations are being shortened [10, 11], community distribution points are dismantled and group models phased out with reduced healthcare worker funding, especially for lay cadres.
This supplement is more timely and relevant than ever. DSD adapts care around client needs—a flexibility that is essential in an era of austerity. In the face of funding cuts, DSD provides not a fallback plan, but a forward-looking strategy. Since its articulation nearly a decade ago [12], DSD has focused on client-centredness, grounded in the assumption that those who are clinically stable and treatment literate can be seen less frequently and will seek care when needed. DSD aligns with self-care principles and ensures that resources are available when intensified care is required.
Crucially, DSD is not HIV-specific. It offers a scalable framework for managing other chronic conditions and co-morbidities among people living with HIV [13]. In today's resource-constrained environment, the principles of DSD—client-centredness, efficiency, flexibility—are not just relevant, but essential. Rather than dismantling the DSD framework, we should build upon it to support an integrated HIV service delivery model for the future.
This supplement demonstrates how DSD can go beyond sustaining HIV treatment. It can be a foundation for integrated chronic care, a model for resilience in fragile systems and a mechanism to safeguard key populations from being left behind. DSD offers a way to keep people at the centre and to build health systems from the ground up—efficiently, equitably and sustainably. The supplement includes research across four key themes.
The first theme is on DSD for HIV treatment alongside the integration of other health needs. Articles in this section explore how DSD can be used to deliver integrated care—for example, combining HIV treatment with hypertension or diabetes management. Three papers—Kiggundu et al. [14], Hickey et al. [15] and Pascoe et al. [16]—highlight the successes of integrating hypertension and HIV care within DSD models. In Uganda, Kiggundu et al. randomised clinics to implement hypertension screening and treatment into their HIV DSD models [14]. There were large numbers of people living with HIV with undiagnosed hypertension, 85% of the 3164 people with HIV and hypertension were newly diagnosed in the study. Presenting a mixed-methods study, integration was concluded to be feasible and adaptable facilitated by the availability of resources and synchronisation of HIV and hypertension visits. In South Africa, Pascoe et al. reviewed the already integrated DSD approach in the country assessing the alignment of medication visits and dispensing intervals for people living with HIV and hypertension from 18 public sector clinics across models of service delivery [16]. The results highlight high degrees of alignment with facility visits and medication pick-ups, 94% and 95%, respectively, and no increase in visit burden for co-morbid clients. In the SEARCH study from Kenya and Uganda, Hickey et al. present an alternative approach to leveraging existing Ministry of Health staff to integrate HIV and non-communicable disease care [15]. They show how Ministry of Health community health workers can effectively deliver integrated HIV and hypertension services at the community level, with active linkages to nearby health facilities. The magnitude of the chronic disease risk among people living with HIV in South Africa was described by Sahu et al. in the Kwa-Zulu Natal province [17]. Among those in a community-based ART model, nearly a quarter of participants smoked (24%), had hypertension (23%) and half (50%) were obese. These data highlight the urgent need to address both the prevention and treatment of chronic conditions among people living with HIV. It is encouraging to see growing opportunities and the increasing feasibility of integrating HIV care alongside common co-morbidities.
The second theme examines how the DSD approach is being applied to other chronic conditions, with two papers on DSD for tuberculosis (TB), drawing lessons from HIV service delivery informing design and scale-up. In a discrete choice experiment (DCE), Strauss et al. found strong preferences for DSD among people with TB in the Eastern Cape province in South Africa, with three classes of preferences—community-based, clinic-based and group-models [18]. In Ferroussier-Davis et al., outcomes among people living with TB accessing care and treatment through different DSD models in Uganda are presented, demonstrating the feasibility of both facility- and community-based DSD models beyond HIV [19].
The need and the practical potential of extending DSD models to often-overlooked populations is the third theme. In Hicks et al., results from implementing a risk assessment tool to adapt care for adolescents and young adults living with HIV in Kenya demonstrates that low-intensity models can be provided to adolescents and young adults living with HIV without additional loss to follow-up or viral non-suppression [20]. In the low HIV prevalence setting of Cambodia, Yam et al. highlight that a community ART delivery model implemented during COVID-19 was cost-effective in reducing the decline in physical health in people living with HIV [21]. Bothma et al. present experiences of healthcare workers delivering a DSD model to trans clients [22]. They demonstrate the need for tailored transgender services as transgender clients continue to face negative experiences when seeking care in standard service delivery facilities. This evidence is particularly crucial in the current climate of shifting funding priorities that represent a major threat to person-centred services for key populations. Another DCE from Australia assessed preferences among gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men and highlighted the diverse preferences for the delivery of sexual health and PrEP services [23].
In addition to the work of Ong et al., DSD for PrEP emerged as the final theme of this supplement and is also the focus of Musheke et al. and Owidi et al. [24, 25]. In Zambia, Musheke et al. highlight the extended reach of PrEP for adolescent girls and young women in Zambia with decentralisation of PrEP services [24]. Similarly, Owidi et al. present the perspectives of both clients and providers in a pharmacy-based PrEP programme, another intervention adapting the “where” building block of service delivery to expand access to PrEP [25].
Beyond these themes, Fernández Villalobos et al. present the scale of global ART DSD implementation prior to COVID-19 across 175 facilities, offering a rare and valuable insight into its scope [26]. This information is particularly relevant for decision-makers, especially in the context of limited resources, where there is a continued need to decongest facilities and prioritise care for clients requiring the most provider attention. And finally, in a viewpoint, Wilkinson et al. summarise the need for differentiation at re-engagement, and the policy work done in South Africa and Zimbabwe to develop re-engagement algorithms [27]. In both examples, the algorithms are designed both to support those with increased clinical needs and to enable rapid access to less-intensive DSD models to support sustained engagement.
In the face of a precipitous decline in U.S. funding and an uncertain global funding context, HIV services are being reshaped at an alarming speed. This supplement offers timely, practical evidence to support ministries of health and finance, implementers and advocates in rethinking how HIV services are delivered. Amid this upheaval, DSD—including beyond HIV treatment—remains one of our strongest tools to sustain the impact of HIV response and uphold the premise of people at the centre. In addition, enablers of DSD such as MMD are particularly important now, as they can be cost-saving for clients and resource saving for the health systems [34] during a period of increased resource constraint. We must resist the impulse to retreat and instead build on the innovations already in place. Yet, without deliberate intention and sustained commitment, DSD risks becoming a casualty of the current funding crisis. It is not only worth protecting; it is essential to the future of the HIV response and part of the antidote. We cannot allow short-term decisions to unravel years of progress. Now is the time to build—not dismantle.
The authors declare no competing interests.
AG wrote an initial outline of the Editorial and the first draft. CBH and LS reviewed and added content. All authors approved the final version of the manuscript.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of the International AIDS Society (JIAS) is a peer-reviewed and Open Access journal for the generation and dissemination of evidence from a wide range of disciplines: basic and biomedical sciences; behavioural sciences; epidemiology; clinical sciences; health economics and health policy; operations research and implementation sciences; and social sciences and humanities. Submission of HIV research carried out in low- and middle-income countries is strongly encouraged.