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PATA 2017 CONTINENTAL SUMMIT
‘Towards an AIDS-Free Africa – Delivering on the Frontline’
23 – 25 October, Johannesburg, South Africa
In partnership with:
The ELMA Foundation
Positive Action for Children Fund (PACF), M.A.C AIDS Fund, Aidsfonds and the
Robert Carr civil society Networks Fund
2
PATA extends special thanks to all contributors, speakers, facilitators, the PATA Board, PATA
Youth and Technical Advisory Panel members and all 2017 Continental Summit participants.
Summit coordination: Luann Hatane - PATA Programme leads: Luann Hatane, Dr Daniella Mark and Agnes Ronan - PATA Anne Magege – The ELMA Foundation Dr Nandita Sugandhi - ICAP and PATA Board member Summit facilitators: Agnes Ronan, Heleen Soeters, Kim Bloch, Samantha Malunga, Helen Chorlton, Dr Daniella Mark, Dr Margret Elang, Anne Magege, Sanana Mubebo and Dr Nandita Sugandhi Summit organisation and logistics: Glynis Gossmann, Faye Macheke, Latiefa Leeman, Matthew Davids, Margail Brown, Nontsiki Martel and Elizabeth Sineke Communications and media: Tammy Burdock Programme contributions:
PATA extends gratitude to all partnering organisations, ministries of health and health facilities
for their contribution to the programme. Your valuable input has contributed to a platform for
linking and learning, which will have far-reaching benefits across the continent.
Special thanks are extended to donor partners: The ELMA Foundation, Positive Action for Children Fund, M.AC AIDS Fund, Aidsfonds and the Robert Carr civil society Networks Fund.
3
ARRIVAL: Sunday 22 October
12:00 – 14:00 Lunch for arriving guests
Hotel restaurant
15:00 – 18:00 Registration
Hotel lobby outside Colosseum
18:30 for 19:00 Casual dinner Hotel restaurant
4
DAY 1: Monday 23 October
Overview: Day 1 provides an overview of progress made against the Global Plan and AIDS
Free frameworks. The day will highlight barriers, share best practices and lessons learnt in
finding and testing children and adolescents living with HIV.
Chair: Dr Elvin Geng, UCSF, USA
06:30 – 08:00 Breakfast
Hotel restaurant
08:30 – 10:30 Plenary
Colosseum
PATA: A decade of linking and learning
Luann Hatane, PATA, South Africa
Opening address – Towards an AIDS free Africa: Regional collaboration
Dr Nonhlanhla Dlamini, National Department of Health, South Africa
The unfinished business: Accelerating access
Laurie Gulaid, UNICEF, South Africa
Finding the missing children: Strategies for increasing identification of
HIV-positive children
Dr Kanchana Suggu, CHAI, USA
10:30 – 11:00 Tea
11:00 – 13:00 Africa Café: Rapid showcase of regional and local promising practices
East Colosseum, Diana and West Colosseum in country groups
5
Time East Colosseum Diana West Colosseum
11h00-11h35 Optimising and expanding HIV
testing for children and
adolescents: New technologies and
approaches
Dr Elizabeth Akello Okoth, EGPAF,
Kenya
Strategies for identifying and
linking HIV-infected children to
care and treatment: Lessons from
a paediatric and adolescent scale-
up project, Johannesburg
Dr Nomathemba Chandiwana,
WITS RHI, South Africa
Unfinished business: Index testing
to find and link HIV-positive
children and adolescents to care
Immaculate Monica Awor, Mityana
Hospital, Uganda
Using differentiated service
delivery (DSD) models to scale up
testing and case identification
among children and adolescents
Dr Allan Ahimbisibwe, EGPAF,
Malawi
Family case finding using mobile
technology
Dr Esmeralda Karajeanes,
Fundação Ariel Glaser,
Mozambique
Starting with where we live: How
community-based volunteers have
increased HCT rates
Diana Kangwa, Ipusukilo Clinic,
Zambia
11h40-12h15 Strategies for identifying and
linking HIV-infected children to
care and treatment: Lessons from a
paediatric and adolescent scale-up
project, Johannesburg
Dr Nomathemba Chandiwana,
WITS RHI, South Africa
Unfinished business: Index testing
to find and link HIV-positive
children and adolescents to care
Immaculate Monica Awor, Mityana
Hospital, Uganda
Optimising and expanding HIV
testing for children and
adolescents: New technologies and
approaches
Dr Elizabeth Akello Okoth, EGPAF,
Kenya
Family case finding using mobile
technology
Dr Esmeralda Karajeanes, Fundação
Ariel Glaser, Mozambique
Starting with where we live: How
community-based volunteers
have increased HCT rates
Diana Kangwa, Ipusukilo Clinic,
Zambia
Using differentiated service
delivery (DSD) models to scale up
testing and case identification
among children and adolescents
Dr Allan Ahimbisibwe, EGPAF,
Malawi
12h20-13h00 Unfinished business: Index testing
to find and link HIV-positive
children and adolescents to care
Immaculate Monica Awor, Mityana
Hospital, Uganda
Optimising and expanding HIV
testing for children and
adolescents: New technologies
and approaches
Dr Elizabeth Akello Okoth, EGPAF,
Kenya
Strategies for identifying and
linking HIV-infected children to
care and treatment: Lessons from a
paediatric and adolescent scale-up
project, Johannesburg
Dr Nomathemba Chandiwana,
WITS RHI, South Africa
Starting with where we live: How
community-based volunteers have
increased HCT rates
Diana Kangwa, Ipusukilo Clinic,
Zambia
Using differentiated service
delivery (DSD) models to scale up
testing and case identification
among children and adolescents
Dr Allan Ahimbisibwe, EGPAF,
Malawi
Family case finding using mobile
technology
Dr Esmeralda Karajeanes, Fundação
Ariel Glaser, Mozambique
6
13:00 – 14:00 Lunch
Hotel restaurant
14:00 – 15:30 Peer-to-Peer Dialogues: Breakaway workshops in clinical, psychosocial,
programme manager and youth representative groups
East Colosseum, Diana, West Colosseum and Mercury
15:30 – 16:00 Tea
16:00 – 17:00 Cross-Cutting Conversations: Panel discussion
Colosseum
Chair: Dr Thameshree Naidu, Unfinished Business, South Africa
18:00 for 18:30 Gala Dinner and PATA Health Provider Awards
Hotel restaurant
Master of Ceremonies: Blessings Banda, WeCare, Malawi
Key note address:
David Altschuler, PATA, United Kingdom
Dr Shaffiq Essajee, UNICEF, USA
Performance: Spha Mdlalose and Thandi Ntuli
7
DAY 2: Tuesday 24 October
Overview: Day 2 will focus on linkages to HIV treatment and care, and retention in care. It
will also introduce differentiated service delivery (DSD) as a best practice model for improved
retention and adherence.
Chair: Dr Angela Mushavi, Ministry of Health and Child Care, Zimbabwe
06:30 – 08:00 Breakfast
Hotel restaurant
08:30 – 10:30 Plenary
Colosseum
Global perspectives on treat all: Finding solutions in the community
Dr Shaffiq Essajee, UNICEF, USA
Defining differentiated care across the HIV continuum
Dr Anna Grimsrud, IAS, South Africa
Optimising paediatric and adolescent ART: Challenges and opportunities
Dr Nandita Sugandhi, ICAP, USA
Value propositions and missing linkages to patient-centred approaches
Lynette Mabote, ARASA, South Africa
10:30 – 11:00 Tea
11:00 – 13:00 Africa Café: Rapid showcase of regional and local promising practices
East Colosseum, Diana and West Colosseum in country groups
8
East Colosseum Diana West Colosseum
11h00-11h35 The CQUIN Learning Network:
Partnering to advance
differentiated care for adolescents
Dr Ruby Fayorsey, ICAP, USA
Waiting efficiently: Implementing
differentiated service delivery
models has reduced client waiting
time
Dr Jacqueline Balungi, Baylor
Uganda
Loading to zero: Achieving viral
suppression at Lobamba Clinic,
Swaziland
Sr. Thelma Nkumane, Lobamba
Clinic, Swaziland
Using NHLS results for action
reports: A data-driven strategy to
improve linkage and quality of HIV
care
Dr Jackie Dunlop, Right to Care,
South Africa
SRHR and HIV integration: Youth
for Real (Y4R) model
Rouzeh Eghtessadi, SAfAIDS,
Zimbabwe
Scaling up: Priority testing and
ART initiation for adolescents
Elleloang Susan Damane, Queen
Elizabeth II Hospital, Lesotho
11h40-12h15 Waiting efficiently: Implementing
differentiated service delivery
(DSD) models has reduced client
waiting time
Dr Jacqueline Balungi, Baylor
Uganda
Loading to zero: Achieving viral
suppression at Lobamba Clinic,
Swaziland
Sr. Thelma Nkumane, Lobamba
Clinic, Swaziland
The CQUIN Learning Network:
Partnering to advance
differentiated care for adolescents
Dr Ruby Fayorsey, ICAP, USA
SRHR and HIV integration: Youth
for Real (Y4R) model
Rouzeh Eghtessadi, SAfAIDS,
Zimbabwe
Scaling up: Priority testing and
ART initiation for adolescents
Elleloang Susan Damane, Queen
Elizabeth II Hospital, Lesotho
Using NHLS results for action
reports: A data-driven strategy to
improve linkage and quality of HIV
care
Dr Jackie Dunlop, Right to Care,
South Africa
12h20-13h00 Loading to zero: Achieving viral
suppression at Lobamba Clinic,
Swaziland
Sr. Thelma Nkumane, Lobamba
Clinic, Swaziland
The CQUIN Learning Network:
Partnering to advance
differentiated care for
adolescents
Dr Ruby Fayorsey, ICAP, USA
Waiting efficiently: Implementing
differentiated service delivery
models has reduced client waiting
time
Dr Jacqueline Balungi, Baylor
Uganda
Scaling up: Priority testing and
ART initiation for adolescents
Elleloang Susan Damane, Queen
Elizabeth II Hospital, Lesotho
Using NHLS results for action
reports: A data-driven strategy to
improve linkage and quality of
HIV care
Dr Jackie Dunlop, Right to Care,
South Africa
SRHR and HIV integration: Youth
for Real (Y4R) model
Rouzeh Eghtessadi, SAfAIDS,
Zimbabwe
9
13:00 – 14:00 Lunch
Hotel restaurant
14:00 – 15:30 Peer-to-Peer Dialogues: Breakaway workshops in clinical, psychosocial,
programme manager and youth representative groups
East Colosseum, Diana, West Colosseum and Mercury
15:30 – 16:00 Tea
16:00 – 17:00 Cross-Cutting Conversations: Panel discussion
Colosseum
Chair: Dominic Kemps, PACF, United Kingdom
18:00 – 19:30 Skills-Building Sessions
Case management: Paediatric case consultations
Dr Mo Archary, King Edward, UKZN, South Africa
West Colosseum
Case management: Adolescent case consultations
Dr Nandita Sugandhi, ICAP, USA
East Colosseum
Clinic data-driven programming
Kim Bloch, PATA, South Africa and Chengetai Dziwa, International
HIV/AIDS Alliance, Zimbabwe
Diana
10
DAY 3: Wednesday 25 October
Overview: The day will highlight the importance of psychosocial support for HIV-affected
children, adolescents and families, with the clinic as a key entry point. Emphasis will also be
placed on resilience-building of health providers as a critical strategy for effective and
sustainable service delivery on the frontline.
Chair: Kate Harrison, AVERT, United Kingdom
06:30 – 07:45 Breakfast
Hotel restaurant
08:30 – 10:30 Plenary
Colosseum
Improving retention in early childhood: The power of family and
community
Noreen Huni, REPSSI, South Africa
A meal of medicines: Why taking pills is so different to eating sweets
Dr Rebecca Hodes, ASRU, Mzantsi Wakho, UCT, South Africa
Youth on the frontline: Partners in service delivery
Kelvin Makura, Y+, READY+, P2Z, Zimbabwe
Health provider resilience: Training, mentoring and self-care
Dr Stephanie Thomas, Zoë-Life, South Africa
10:30 – 11:00 Tea
11:00 – 13:00 Africa Café: Rapid showcase of regional and local promising practices
East Colosseum, Diana and West Colosseum in country groups
11
East Colosseum Diana West Colosseum
11h00-11h35 Beyond peer support: Clinic
engagement with young people
living with HIV
Lubega Kizza, ISS Mulago, Uganda
and Grace Ngulube, Zalewa Clinic,
Malawi
Facility-based training, mentoring
and self-care for health providers
on the frontline
Dr Paul Cromhout, Small Projects
Foundation, South Africa
Child’s play: Increasing ECD
knowledge in HIV-positive
mothers through community-clinic
collaboration
Chrispo Madhovoyo, Maboleni
Clinic, Zimbabwe
Youth care clubs
Ruth Henwood, WITS RHI, South
Africa
Nurse-led care of HIV-infected
children and adolescents:
Mentoring that works
Dr Carol Tait, ANOVA Health
Institute, South Africa
Disclosure 101: Improving
adherence through disclosure
support
Dr Martial Lantche, Chantal Biya
Foundation, Cameroon
11h40-12h15 Facility-based training, mentoring
and self-care for health providers
on the frontline
Dr Paul Cromhout, Small Projects
Foundation, South Africa
Child’s play: Increasing ECD
knowledge in HIV-positive
mothers through community-
clinic collaboration
Chrispo Madhovoyo, Maboleni
Clinic, Zimbabwe
Beyond peer support: Clinic
engagement with young people
living with HIV
Lubega Kizza, ISS Mulago, Uganda
and Grace Ngulube, Zalewa Clinic,
Malawi
Nurse-led care of HIV-infected
children and adolescents:
Mentoring that works
Dr Carol Tait, ANOVA Health
Institute, South Africa
Disclosure 101: Improving
adherence through disclosure
support
Dr Martial Lantche, Chantal Biya
Foundation, Cameroon
Youth care clubs
Ruth Henwood, WITS RHI, South
Africa
12h20-13h00 Child’s play: Increasing ECD
knowledge in HIV-positive
mothers through community-clinic
collaboration
Chrispo Madhovoyo, Maboleni
Clinic, Zimbabwe
Beyond peer support: Clinic
engagement with young people
living with HIV
Lubega Kizza, ISS Mulago, Uganda
and Grace Ngulube, Zalewa Clinic,
Malawi
Facility-based training, mentoring
and self-care for health providers
on the frontline
Dr Paul Cromhout, Small Projects
Foundation, South Africa
Disclosure 101: Improving
adherence through disclosure
support
Dr Martial Lantche, Chantal Biya
Foundation, Cameroon
Youth care clubs
Ruth Henwood, WITS RHI, South
Africa
Nurse-led care of HIV-infected
children and adolescents:
Mentoring that works
Dr Carol Tait, ANOVA Health
Institute, South Africa
12
13:00 – 14:00 Lunch
Hotel restaurant
14:00 – 15:30 Next Steps Workshop: Taking the lessons home
East Colosseum, Diana, West Colosseum, Mercury and Penthouse
15:30 – 16:00 Closing ceremony
Colosseum
Agnes Ronan and Luann Hatane, PATA, South Africa
16:00 Group photo, certificate collection and tea
17:00 Transfer to Sandon City
Dinner vouchers available
13
DEPARTURE: Thursday 26 October
Before 11:00 Hotel check-out
Departures to O.R Tambo International Airport based on flight times
14
Plenary presenter and chairperson profiles
Agnes Ronan Bringing more than 10 years of public health experience, specialising in maternal, child and adolescent health, Agnes Ronan joined Paediatric-AdolescentTreatment Africa (PATA) as Head of Programmes in January 2017. In this role, she is responsible for the overall management of all PATA programmes. Agnes previously held project management positions at the University of Cape Town’s School of Public Health and Family Medicine and Department of Adolescent Health. Prior to that, she worked at the Desmond Tutu HIV Foundation, focusing on various clinical trials. Dr Angela Mushavi Dr Angela Mushavi is a senior paediatrician and the National PMTCT and Paediatric HIV Care and Treatment Coordinator in the Ministry of Health and Child Care, providing technical leadership and guidance for the expansion of PMTCT and Paediatric HIV and AIDS care and treatment programmes in Zimbabwe. Dr Mushavi also sits on the Steering Committee of the African Network for the Care of Children Affected by HIV (ANECCA). Dr Anna Grimsrud Anna Grimsrud, PhD, is the Lead Technical Advisor with the International AIDS Society leading the differentiated care initiative. Dr Grimsrud holds an MPH and PhD from the University of Cape Town and her research portfolio includes collaborations with IeDEA-Southern Africa Collaboration, Desmond Tutu HIV Foundation and Médecins Sans Frontières. Blessings Banda Blessings Banda is Executive Director of Beyond Our Hearts Foundation in Malawi and the Chief Executive Officer of the WeCare Youth Organisation. Blessings has worked in HIV programmes for 11 years and is currently pursuing a Master degree in Public Health. Blessings has also studied with Harvard University in Global Health Delivery, and has worked with various organisations over the years, namely Partners in Health, the Orphan and Widow AIDS Campaign, Concern Universal and the Ministry of Education in Malawi. He has supported the establishment of HIV and nutrition management systems across Malawi. Dr Daniella Mark Dr Daniella Mark is the Senior Technical Advisor for Paediatric-AdolescentTreatment Africa (PATA). A neuropsychologist by training, she has a special interest in the intersection of HIV and mental health. She has produced more than 50 peer review publications and convention presentations in the areas of uptake and delivery of HIV prevention and treatment, with a specific focus on paediatric and adolescent services. Dr Mark was recognised in 2013 by the Mail and Guardian as one of South Africa’s Top 200 Young South Africans and has contributed to global policy including the development of WHO guidelines. She is a member of several global and regional platforms, coalitions and working groups targeting improved HIV services for paediatric and adolescent populations, including co-chairing the IATT Child Survival Working Group. She is also a board member of the Positive Action for Children Fund (PACF).
15
David Altschuler David is Chairman of the board of Trustees of the One to Once Children’s Fund and has extensive experience in initiating and managing charity projects. He was founding chairman of the charity, Refusenik, and co-founded The One to One Children's Fund in 1997. David is also the co-founder of and chairman to the PATA Board of Directors. David, who qualified as a chartered accountant in South Africa, now lives in the UK where, until recently, he was a long-standing Trustee of the UK Family & Parenting Institute. Dominic Kemps Dominic Kemps is Director for the Positive Action for Children’s Fund (PACF). Dominic began his career working in technology companies in Silicon Valley; an NGO in sexual and reproductive health in Washington DC; and in the public sector with the European Parliament in Luxembourg. In 2009, Dominic joined ViiV Healthcare, to launch and manage the Positive Action for Children Fund, ViiV’s £50 million, 10-year commitment to support communities globally, seeking to address mother-to-child transmission of HIV. Dr Elvin Geng Dr Elvin Geng, MD, MPH, is Associate Professor of Medicine at the University of California at San Francisco (UCSF) in the Division of HIV, Infectious Diseases and Global Medicine. Dr Geng trained in clinical infectious diseases and epidemiology. His research uses the lens of implementation science to improve the effectiveness and efficiency of the public health response to the global HIV epidemic. Dr Geng’s current projects address access to HIV treatment, quality of care and sustainability. Dr Kanchana Suggu Dr Kanchana Suggu is the Director for eMTCT and paediatric HIV programs, focusing on service delivery at the Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI). In this role, she works with CHAI country teams in Malawi, Uganda, Zambia, Zimbabwe and Lesotho to execute eMTCT and paediatric HIV programs. Prior to stepping into this role, Dr Suggu was the Deputy Country Director in CHAI’s Liberia office, where she supported the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare to develop a national Accelerated Action Plan to Reduce Maternal and Neonatal Mortality, and establish health financing and family planning programs for CHAI in Liberia. Kate Harrison Kate Harrison joined Avert in September 2017 as head of programme funding. Kate has over 20 years’ experience in health, HIV and international development. Before joining Avert, Kate worked at the Children's Investment Fund Foundation, managing the Accelerating Children's HIV Treatment (ACT) initiative, a public-private partnership with PEPFAR. This followed seven years working at Comic Relief, managing their health and HIV portfolio. Kate also worked at the International HIV/AIDS Alliance, as their senior technical advisor for children, and is the author of 'Building Hope' a guide for communities supporting children affected by HIV and AIDS. Kelvin Makura
Kelvin Kudakwashe Makura is a passionate youth coordinator and advocate from Zimbabwe. Kelvin studied information technology at the University of Zimbabwe and is a champion wheelchair basketball player. Kelvin works with Zimbabwe Young Positives in collaboration with global and regional networks of YPLHIV (Y+ and AY+) where he coordinates activities across many adolescent-focused projects including P2Z, PITCH and READY+.
16
Laurie Gulaid Laurie Gulaid serves as Senior Health Specialist (PMTCT and Paediatric HIV) for UNICEF’s Eastern and Southern Africa Regional Office. She focuses on HIV in the first decade of life including the elimination agenda, integration of HIV and maternal and child health, community engagement and HIV in emergencies. Laurie joined UNICEF after 15 years as a senior-level consultant on HIV and maternal and child health, including for UNICEF, the United States Government (PEPFAR, USAID and CDC) and several international NGOs. Earlier in her career, Laurie worked as an M&E specialist with USAID in Ghana, as deputy director clinical services for TB control in New York City and on polio eradication in Nigeria and India. Luann Hatane Luann is Executive Director at Paediatric-AdolescentTreatment Africa (PATA). A social worker by training, with a MPhil in development studies, she has over 20 years development practice experience, having worked for several health-related agencies and NGOs in Southern-East Africa. In the early days of the HIV epidemic, Luann coordinated client services at Triangle Project and later became Director to the National AIDS Convention of South Africa (NACOSA) where she remained for several years. Luann went on to coordinate HIV programmes at CARE International (South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland). This was followed by her appointment as Country Director to Cross-Cultural Solutions, prior to her joining PATA in 2014. Luann’s interest in the nexus of research, policy and practice is underpinned with a deep commitment to service quality on the frontline. Lynette Mabote Lynette Mabote is the Programmes Lead at the AIDS and Rights Alliance for Southern Africa (ARASA) – a partnership of 117 civil society organisations working on promoting rights-based responses to HIV, TB and SRH in 18 countries in Southern and East Africa. Leveraging on past experiences, she works with ARASA partners to strengthen their capacity to undertake innovative advocacy and promote enabling policy and legal environments, which ultimately prioritise just and human right-centric responses to prevention, treatment and care services. Lynette’s motto in life is simple: To help shape strong, resilient and healthy Afro-conscious young people.
Dr Nandita Sugandhi Dr Nandita Sugandhi is a paediatrician and recently joined ICAP as Product Introduction Coordinator for OPTIMIZE at Columbia University. After completing her training in New York, she spent four years working with the Baylor International Pediatric AIDS Initiative (BIPAI) in Swaziland, Botswana, Tanzania and India. From 2010 she worked with the Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI) as a Clinical Advisor to improve access to essential drugs and diagnostics for HIV Prevention and Treatment. Dr Sugandhi is also a practicing paediatrician providing HIV care to infants, children and youth at the Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York City. Dr Nonhlanhla Dlamini Dr Nonhlanhla Rose-Marie Dlamini is a registered paediatrician and is head of Child, Adolescent and School Health at the National Department of Health in South Africa. Her unit leads in national policy formulation and M&E in the areas of child, school and adolescent health, immunisation, child nutrition and paediatric HIV. Most recently, she has been instrumental in setting up the Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) vaccination programme, which uses school health as the service delivery platform. She has worked at all levels of the health system as well as in academia.
17
Noreen Huni Noreen M Huni holds a Master’s degree in Adult Education and a Health and Adult Education degree from the University of Zimbabwe and has over 25 years work experience. She is currently the Chief Executive Officer for the Regional Psychosocial Support Initiative (REPSSI), a 13-country regional NGO that aims to provide leadership, knowledge development and quality technical assistance in psychosocial support for children and youth affected by poverty, conflict, HIV & AIDS. Noreen is also the Deputy Chairperson for global The Coalition for Children Affected by HIV & AIDS (CCABA). She also leads an Early Childhood Development World Forum Foundation - Voices of Hope Project on Children and HIV & AIDS and is a coordinator of the ECD Global Leaders. Furthermore, she serves on the WHO Civil Society Reference Group on HIV & AIDS. Dr Rebecca Hodes Dr Rebecca Hodes is Director of the AIDS and Society Research Unit (ASRU) at the University of Cape Town and the author of Broadcasting the Pandemic: A History of HIV. She has authored many journal articles and book chapters in the field of public health and the history of medicine, with a focus on sexual and reproductive rights and the AIDS epidemic. Dr Hodes is the principal investigator of the Mzantsi Wakho study, focusing on the lived experiences of HIV-positive teenagers. Dr Shaffiq Essajee Dr Shaffiq Essajee recently joined UNICEF as Senior Advisor within its HIV program. Prior to this he led PMTCT work at WHO and remains a member of the Pediatric Infectious Disease Faculty at New York University where he has been caring for children with HIV for 20 years. He hails originally from Kenya and in 2001 established one of the first dedicated paediatric HIV clinics in the region in his hometown of Mombasa. He is a graduate of the Oxford University Medical School, and completed his residency in paediatrics at the University of California, San Francisco before joining the Paediatric Infectious Disease Division at NYU. Before joining WHO, Dr Essajee was the Senior Medical Advisor for the Clinton Health Access Initiative. Dr Stephanie Thomas Dr Stephanie Thomas is the founder and Director of Zoë-Life, a South African Capacity building and Development Organisation committed to pushing the boundaries to ensure better life opportunities for children, youth and their families. Zoë-Life has innovated the Kidz-Alive model, which is used in health facilities and communities to support testing, disclosure and treatment of children living with HIV, TB, GBV and Diabetes. In addition to her work with Zoë-Life, Dr Thomas served on the board of iThemba Lethu for 15 years, currently serves on the board of WWSOSA and is a member of the South African Relational Metrics Associates, providing technical support within Clinical and NPO environments around Relational Leadership. Dr Thameshree Naidu Dr Thameshree Naidu is a public health medicine specialist currently leading the technical component of a multi-partner collaborative (Unfinished Business), aiming to accelerate the achievement of the 90-90-90 targets for paediatric and adolescent HIV in KwaZulu Natal, South Africa. After graduating from the University of Cape Town, Dr Naidu worked for 10 years as a clinician and clinical manager rotating through many health facilities from primary health care to tertiary level institutions in South Africa and the UK. The system challenges that she and others experienced daily as frontline healthcare workers, and their lack of key skills to address these, prompted Dr Naidu to study further and transition to Public Health.
19
PATA 2017 Summit: Participating Health Facilities
Country Health facility
Cameroon Chantal Biya Foundation
Cameroon Hôpital de District de Zoetele
Cameroon Lolodorf District Hospital
Cameroon Nkwen Baptist Health Centre
Côte d’Ivoire Centre Médico-Social Wale DRC CAP Heal Africa
DRC Centre of Excellence
DRC Nundu General Referral Hospital
Ethiopia ALERT
Ethiopia Mekdim Ethiopia National
Kenya Ahero Subcounty Hospital
Kenya Kenyatta National Hospital Comprehensive Care Centre
Kenya Kilgoris Sub County Hospital
Kenya LVCT Health
Kenya Migosi Sub County Hospital
Kenya RCTP - FACES: Tuunange Youth Clinic
Lesotho Baylor Lesotho
Lesotho Mabote Filter Clinic
Lesotho Queen II Hospital
Malawi Baylor Malawi
Malawi Neno District Hospital
Malawi Partners in Hope
Malawi Tisungane Clinic
Malawi Zalewa Clinic
Mozambique Centro de Saude de Boane
Mozambique US de Marracuene (ADECC)
Mozambique Ponto focal de Moçambique Y+ (ADECC partner)
Nigeria Ekiti State University Teaching Hospital (EKSUTH) ADO
Nigeria General Hospital Yauri
Nigeria Infectious Disease Institute, University of Ibadan
South Africa WhizzKids United Health Academy
South Africa Bisho Hospital
South Africa Empilweni Gompo Community Health Centre
South Africa Groote Schuur Hospital
South Africa Witkoppen Health and Welfare Centre
South Africa Hillbrow Community Health Centre
Swaziland Lobamba Clinic
Swaziland Piggs Peak Government Hospital
Tanzania Infectious Disease Centre (IDC)
Tanzania Mafia District Hospital
20
Tanzania Tunduma Health Centre
Tanzania PASADA- Upendano
Uganda Alive Medical Services
Uganda Baylor Uganda
Uganda Fort Portal Regional Referral Hospital
Uganda Lira Infectious Disease Clinic
Uganda Mityana Hospital
Uganda Mulago COE ISS Clinic
Zambia Chazanga Health Centre
Zambia Chikupi Rural Health Centre
Zambia Estates Clinic
Zambia Ipusukilo Clinic
Zambia Kafue District Hospital
Zimbabwe Harare Children’s Hospital OI Clinic
Zimbabwe Maboleni Clinic
Zimbabwe Mpilo Central Hospital
Zimbabwe Rutsanana Clinic
Zimbabwe
Zimbabwe
Waterfalls Clinic
Newlands Clinic
21
(Xhosa)
Nkosi sikelel' iAfrika
Maluphakanyisw' uphondo lwayo,
(Zulu)
Yizwa imithandazo yethu,
Nkosi sikelela, thina lusapho lwayo.
(Sesotho)
Morena boloka setjhaba sa heso,
O fedise dintwa le matshwenyeho,
O se boloke, O se boloke setjhaba sa heso, Setjhaba sa,
South Africa, South Africa!
(Afrikaans)
Uit die blou van onse hemel,
Uit die diepte van ons see,
Oor ons ewige gebergtes,
Waar die kranse antwoord gee,
(English)
Sounds the call to come together,
And united we shall stand,
Let us live and strive for freedom,
In South Africa our land.
National Anthem – South Africa
22
The ELMA Foundation: @ELMAPhilanthro
Positive Action Children’s Fund: @ViiHC
M.AC AIDS Fund: @MACAIDSFund @MACcosmetics
AIDSfonds: @Aidsfonds @aidsfonds
Robert Carr civil society Networks Fund: @robertcarrfund
Social media
@teampata
@PaediatricAdolescentTreatmentAfrica
@TeamPata
#PATA2017ContinentalSummit
#FINDTREATCARE
#AIDSFreeAfrica
#FrontlineHealthWorkers
23
DAY 1: Monday 23rd October 2017
8h30-10h30
Plenary Colosseum
East Colosseum Diana West Colosseum Mercury
11h00-13h00
Africa Café
Country Group A
South Africa, Zimbabwe,
Zambia, & Lesotho
Country Group B
Kenya, Uganda & Tanzania
Country Group C
Nigeria, Cameroon, DRC,
Ethiopia, Mozambique & Malawi
14h00-15h30
Peer-to-Peer
Dialogues
Counsellors
Counsellors, social workers &
psychologists
Ministry of Health &
Programme Managers
EGPAF, CHAI, AVERT, UCSF,
WITS RHI, Zoe-Life, UNICEF,
PEPFAR, ICAP, IAS, ARASA,
ELMA, PACF, Right to Care,
ANOVA, ASRU, REPSSI, IHAA,
CDC, PEPFAR
Clinical
Doctors, nurses, pharmacists &
clinic managers
Youth
Youth Advisory Panel, AY+,
Y+
16h00-17h00
Panel Colosseum
18h30 Gala Dinner & Awards
Main Restaurant
DAY 2: Tuesday 24th October 2017
8h30-10h30
Plenary Colosseum
East Colosseum Diana West Colosseum Mercury
11h00-13h00
Africa Café
Country Group A
South Africa, Zimbabwe,
Zambia, & Lesotho
Country Group B
Kenya, Uganda & Tanzania
Country Group C
Nigeria, Cameroon, DRC,
Ethiopia, Mozambique & Malawi
14h00-15h30
Peer-to-Peer
Dialogues
Counsellors
Counsellors, social workers &
psychologists
Ministry of Health &
Programme Managers
EGPAF, CHAI, AVERT, UCSF,
WITS RHI, Zoe-Life, UNICEF,
PEPFAR, ICAP, IAS, ARASA,
ELMA, PACF, Right to Care,
ANOVA, ASRU, REPSSI, IHAA,
CDC, PEPFAR
Clinical
Doctors, nurses, pharmacists &
clinic managers
Youth
Youth Advisory Panel, AY+,
Y+
16h00-17h00
Panel Colosseum
18h00-19h30
Skills building
session
West Colosseum Diana East Colosseum
Paediatric case consultation Clinic-data-driven programming Adolescent case consultation
Road map
24
DAY 3: Wed 25th October 2017
8h30-10h30
Plenary Colosseum
East Colosseum Diana West Colosseum
11h00-13h00
Africa Café
Country Group A
South Africa, Zimbabwe, Zambia, &
Lesotho
Country Group B
Kenya, Uganda & Tanzania
Country Group C
Nigeria, Cameroon, DRC, Ethiopia,
Mozambique & Malawi
East Colosseum Diana West Colosseum Mercury Penthouse
14h00-15h30
Take home
session
Country Group A South Africa,
Zimbabwe, Zambia, &
Lesotho
Country Group B
Kenya, Uganda &
Tanzania
Country Group C
Nigeria, Cameroon,
DRC, Ethiopia,
Mozambique & Malawi
Youth
Youth Advisory Panel,
AY+, Y+
MOH & Programme
Managers EGPAF, CHAI, AVERT,
UCSF, WITS RHI, Zoe-Life,
UNICEF, PEPFAR, ICAP,
IAS, ARASA, ELMA, PACF,
Right to Care, ANOVA,
ASRU, REPSSI, IHAA, CDC,
PEPFAR
15h30-16h00
Closure Colosseum
16h00
Free time
Shuttle to Sandton City
Dinner voucher
25
Diana
Tea
Colosseum East
Courtyard
Tea
Lobby
Registration
Tea
Restaurant
Hotel Reception
Juno
PATA office
Neptune
Networking
zone
Mercury (12) Big boardroom
& Youth zone
Bathroom
Lift to rooms & to
Penthouse
Meeting room
Colosseum West Translator
Station
Colosseum
Marketplace &
network zone
Front
Room divider
Entrance
Venue map
26
Paediatric – Adolescent Treatment Africa
PATA believes in the principle of developing sustainable interventions that are receptive to global guidance, linked to national strategic plans, informed by people living with HIV and undertaken in collaboration with local communities. PATA works to extend the quality of service delivery on the frontlines of paediatric and adolescent HIV prevention, treatment, care and support. Health facilities within the PATA Network are encouraged to reach out to neighbouring facilities and local partners to expand the ‘PATA Network’ and extend the ‘PATA effect’ through peer-to-peer and south-to-south learning and exchange. For more information about PATA, visit our website www.teampata.org
Tel: +27 21 447 9566
Fax: +27 86 619 1623
Email: [email protected]
P.O Box 12971
Mowbray
South Africa
7705
Paediatric-Adolescent Treatment Africa
Registered as: Paediatric AIDS Treatment for Africa
NPC. NPO 2007/01297/08. PBO 930034219