PEPFAR's annual planning process is done either at the country (COP) or regional level (ROP).
PEPFAR's programs are implemented through implementing partners who apply for funding based on PEPFAR's published Requests for Applications.
Since 2010, PEPFAR COPs have grouped implementing partners according to an organizational type. We have retroactively applied these classifications to earlier years in the database as well.
Also called "Strategic Areas", these are general areas of HIV programming. Each program area has several corresponding budget codes.
Specific areas of HIV programming. Budget Codes are the lowest level of spending data available.
Expenditure Program Areas track general areas of PEPFAR expenditure.
Expenditure Sub-Program Areas track more specific PEPFAR expenditures.
Object classes provide highly specific ways that implementing partners are spending PEPFAR funds on programming.
Cross-cutting attributions are areas of PEPFAR programming that contribute across several program areas. They contain limited indicative information related to aspects such as human resources, health infrastructure, or key populations programming. However, they represent only a small proportion of the total funds that PEPFAR allocates through the COP process. Additionally, they have changed significantly over the years. As such, analysis and interpretation of these data should be approached carefully. Learn more
Beneficiary Expenditure data identify how PEPFAR programming is targeted at reaching different populations.
Sub-Beneficiary Expenditure data highlight more specific populations targeted for HIV prevention and treatment interventions.
PEPFAR sets targets using the Monitoring, Evaluation, and Reporting (MER) System - documentation for which can be found on PEPFAR's website at https://www.pepfar.gov/reports/guidance/. As with most data on this website, the targets here have been extracted from the COP documents. Targets are for the fiscal year following each COP year, such that selecting 2016 will access targets for FY2017. This feature is currently experimental and should be used for exploratory purposes only at present.
Years of mechanism: 2008 2009
SUMMARY:
Absolute Return for Kids' (ARK) focus is to provide a comprehensive care package for PMTCT services to
HIV-infected mothers and their children through partnerships with local government health facilities. ARK's
primary emphasis has been in areas of human capacity development, local organization capacity
development, and construction/renovation at about ten facilities. The target population is HIV-infected
pregnant women and their infants.
BACKGROUND:
ARK is a charity organization whose mission is to facilitate and support delivery of accessible, sustainable
comprehensive treatment, care and support services to children and their caregivers in communities
affected by HIV and poverty. In partnership with the KwaZulu-Natal Department of Health (KZNDOH), ARK,
has established an antiretroviral treatment program in government primary health facilities and hospitals.
Specifically, ARK works with the KZNDOH to identify sites and areas for capacity building, including human
resources, modest infrastructure support, and organizational capacity development. PEPFAR funding has
enabled ARK to successfully enroll over 15,000 patients in ART in KZN with about 12000 remaining in care
at ARK supported sites.
FY 2008 funding will enable ARK to expand its established ARV treatment program to include a
comprehensive range of PMTCT services. These services will be supported by improvements in the
infrastructure of targeted sites, and the provision and training of human resources in partner health facilities
to further strengthen their capacity to deliver quality counseling and testing, treatment, care and support for
HIV-infected mothers and their children.
ACTIVITIES & EXPECTED RESULTS:
ACTIVITY 1: Support to KZNDOH
ARK works with the KZNDOH to develop the necessary processes and systems to manage the PMTCT
program, to ensure that the model implemented is scaleable, sustainable and replicable elsewhere. ARK's
PMTCT program works within KZNDOH selected districts and focuses on strengthening the existing
networks of operating clinics; capacity-building is site specific. Upon identification of a site, ARK conducts
an analysis to identify staffing, clinical equipment, and infrastructure needs. The program works with facility
management to prioritize and promptly address gaps and develop plans for manageable scale-up. ARK
also assesses hospital patient data management systems and will employ and train, where needed, data
capturers. The data capturers support both providers and facility administrators to strengthen the
management and use of patient records systems for improved service delivery.
ACTIVITY 2: Human Capacity Development
ARK will conduct a thorough needs analysis of human resource capacity prior to initiating support to the
PMTCT program at each site and recruit all the necessary medical staff required for the successful rollout of
services. The staff recruited varies from site to site but include doctors, nurses, pharmacists, pharmacy
assistants, medical technologists, facility-based counselors, and patient advocates. For all key staff, ARK
will provide two-week orientation training based on the National PMTCT and Infant Feeding Curriculum and
Methodology. The training and follow-up refresher courses cover all aspects of ARK's PMTCT program
including employee policies and procedures, onsite mentorship from experienced ARK staff, and an
introduction to key performance areas. The specific topics covered include: counseling and testing,
treatment guidelines for pregnant women, management of opportunistic and sexually transmitted infections,
adherence support as well as the value of community access, prevention counseling and patient advocacy.
Staff are invited and encouraged to attend formal training offered by external providers including other
PEPFAR partners such as the Foundation for Professional Development (FPD).
ACTIVITY 3: Counseling and Testing
ARK will focus on provider driven opt-out testing to all pregnant mothers entering the antenatal clinics. To
better ensure sustainability, where possible, ARK will use the counselors available through the District HIV
program and existing trained community care workers to provide counseling. Where needed, ARK will
employ and train additional counselors. Counseling and ongoing training will be in line with the National
Department of Health (NDOH) Guidelines. ARK will provide mentorship and supportive supervision to lay
counselors to ensure high quality standards for CT. In accordance with NDOH standards, all testing will be
conducted by trained medical staff (primarily nurses). Pre-and post-test counseling for all clients will include
information on HIV & AIDS, STIs, prevention education, risk reduction strategies, and partner testing. Post-
test counseling will further include information and support on treatment, care and support services, and
positive living.
Formal and informal training and onsite mentorship will be provided to all lay counselors in the program.
ARK, in partnership with the Centre for Social Science Research at the University of Cape Town, will
continue to develop and improve training modules for lay counselors. The areas covered in training include:
basic and advanced counseling skills, positive living, disease progression, opportunistic infections, risk
reduction for HIV transmission and safer sex.
ACTIVITY 4: Treatment for HIV-infected pregnant women
All pregnant women testing positive for HIV will have an immediate CD4 test and will have a clinical
assessment for the present of opportunistic infections and for staging. Women will receive nutritional
counseling as well as counseling around feeding options for their babies. Exclusive breast feeding will be
encouraged in those women who do not satisfy the AFASS principles for formula feeding. A particular focus
will be on triaging pregnant women who are treatment eligible into treatment programs, and ensuring that
women who are not treatment eligible are provided with the appropriate dual-drug prophylaxis (new DOH
guidelines.) The process and follow up of women on triple therapy will be dependant on the facility. In some
facilities this site will be in the same place as the antenatal service, in others the ARV treatment site will be
separate to the antenatal clinic.
Upon registration into the PMTCT program, a paid trained patient advocate is assigned to the patient. The
patient advocate conducts a pre-treatment home visit and provides ongoing support to the patient and her
family. The patient advocate will accompany the mother to her antenatal visits, provide adherence support
and referrals and follow-up as needed. Should a patient be non-adherent or lost to follow-up, the patient
advocate will investigate the reasons for this, acting as the link between the patient and the clinic. ARK
facilitates the integration process for ART, TB, palliative care and OVC care and support services where
appropriate.
Activity Narrative: ACTIVITY 5: Pediatrics
HIV-infected pregnant women will be educated and encouraged during pregnancy to undertake post
delivery testing for their babies. All children born to HIV-infected mothers will be closely followed up for any
evidence of early deterioration and will receive NVP and AZT as per PMTCT protocol. At the six week visit,
all HIV exposed babies will have a PCR test done, will be given cotrimoxazole prophylaxis and multivitamins
to await the PCR result. Mothers with a CD4>350 or between 250-350 with WHO STG 1&2 will stop HAART
if babies are exclusively formula fed OR after weaning if exclusively breast fed. Formula fed babies that test
negative will be offered an Elisa at 18 months. Breast fed babies if tested negative will be offered a PCR at
12 weeks after weaning and if still negative an Elisa at 18 months. HIV-infected babies will be immediately
referred to ARK's ARV treatment program and will have access to cotrimoxazole prophylaxis, multivitamin
supplements and general nutritional advice, and breastfeeding counseling and support for the mother. The
patient advocates (PA) will ensure that all babies are brought back for their immunization and testing for HIV
will be actively encouraged by the community workers.
ACTIVITY 6: Family-Centered Care and Support Services
In an effort to encourage adherence among mothers and ongoing care for their infants, ARK's program
takes an integrated maternal and child health care approach and extends care and support (including
treatment literacy and prevention education) to all members of a patient's household. Together, facility-
based counselors and patient advocates counsel mothers and their partners on treatment literacy, nutrition,
safe infant feeding practices, and safe sex. They offer services within homes and provide encouragement
and support to male partners to serve as "adherence buddies" in the management of care during pregnancy
and after delivery. Patient advocates are also trained to provide basic psychosocial support and link
mothers to individual counseling services and/or support groups.
ACTIVITY 7: Quality Assurance/Improvement
ARK provides computers and employs data capturers at all sites. Data is captured from patient folders and
transferred to ARK's data center, allowing for ongoing evaluation and outcome analysis. Adherence rates,
death rates and loss to follow-up are closely monitored. Quarterly updates are provided to the KZNDOH and
information is used within the clinics to strengthen service delivery. All ARK staff are provided onsite, on-the
-job training, followed with regular onsite mentorship and evaluation by ARK's national executive and
provincial management teams. Informal training sessions are conducted quarterly. Staff are encouraged to
attend formal external training courses offered by FPD.
These activities contribute to PEPFAR's 2-7-10 goals by increasing the number of South Africans on
treatment and possible new infections averted among infants and children.
Absolute Return for Kids' (ARK) focus is to provide a comprehensive palliative care package for services to
primary emphasis areas are human capacity development, local organization capacity development, and
construction/renovation. The target population is people living with HIV and AIDS.
ARK is a charity organization whose mission is to facilitate and support delivery of accessible and
sustainable comprehensive treatment, care and support services to children and their caregivers in
communities affected by HIV and poverty.
ARK's mission is to facilitate and support delivery of accessible and sustainable comprehensive treatment,
care and support services to children and their caregivers in communities affected by HIV and AIDS. In
partnership with the KwaZulu-Natal Department of Health (KZNDOH), ARK, as the implementing partner,
comprehensive range of palliative care services. These services will be supported by improvements in the
to further strengthen their capacity to deliver quality care and support for HIV-infected mothers and their
children. ARK provides palliative care services in accordance with South African national treatment
guidelines.
ACTIVITIES AND EXPECTED RESULTS:
ARK's primary objective is to keep mothers alive to continue caring for their children. The primary
caregiver's continued survival and potential ability to earn a living while receiving ARV treatment will have a
substantial impact on the extended family.
ARK works with the KZNDOH to develop the necessary processes and systems to manage the palliative
care program, to ensure that the model created is scaleable, sustainable and replicable elsewhere.
Capacity-building is site specific. Upon identification of a site, an analysis of the needs of each site will be
done with respect to staffing (doctors, nurses, pharmacists and pharmacy assistants), clinical equipment,
management systems, patient advocacy and temporary structures. The most pressing requirements are
met in order to speed up the ability for patients to receive treatment. Where necessary ARK provides
support in the ARV site and pharmacy accreditation process.
palliative care program at each site and recruits all the necessary medical and support staff required for the
successful rollout of services. The staff recruited varies from site to site but include doctors, nurses,
pharmacists, pharmacy assistants, medical technologists, facility-based counselors, and patient advocates.
For all key staff, ARK will provide training and follow-up refresher courses cover all aspects of ARK's
palliative program including employee and volunteer policies and procedures, onsite mentorship from
experienced ARK staff, and an introduction to key performance areas. The specific topics covered include:
counseling and testing, screening for pain and symptoms, screening for OIs including the provision of
cotrimoxazole prophylaxis, symptom control and management of opportunistic and sexually transmitted
infections, nutritional assessment and counseling, adherence support, as well as the value of community
access, prevention with positives, referral and patient advocacy. Staff are invited and encouraged to attend
formal training offered by external providers including other PEPFAR partners such as the Hospice
Palliative Care Association (HPCA) and Foundation for Professional Development (FPD).
ACTIVITY 3: Clinical Care
ARK's palliative care program focuses on a network of clinics operating within a district, in order to create a
sustainable and efficient system that supports the continuum of care and up and down referral. ARK-
employed doctors and nurses provide comprehensive treatment management including patient uptake,
doctor consultations, counseling and testing, TB screening and management, pain management and
symptom control, treatment of opportunistic and sexually transmitted infections including the provision of
cotrimoxazole, lab testing and patient education. Pharmacists are responsible for the dispensing of
medication.
As part of the palliative care package for HIV-infected individual, individuals accessing ARK's services will
be staged and entered into ARK's ARV treatment program. All patients with a CD4 count of <200 will be
referred to ARK's ART program to confirm their eligibility for treatment. The program's medical and
psychosocial criteria are designed to ensure that the patient is prepared and ready to adhere to ART. All
patients being assessed undergo a treatment literacy program and are educated about positive living.
Patients are encouraged to motivate their partners/spouses to get tested and, if necessary, enter the
treatment program. HIV-infected patients, not in-need of ARV treatment and not with active TB, will be
offered isoniazid prophylaxis, monitoring, and ongoing counseling support for 6 months. At the end of the 6
months, these patients will be reassessed for further treatment. Although ARK's treatment target population
is predominantly mothers and children, increased attention is being given to encourage and increase male
partner (and men in general) participation.
ACTIVITY 4: Family-Centered Care and Support Services.
Activity Narrative:
takes an integrated, family-centered approach to care and extends support (including treatment literacy and
prevention education) to all members of a patient's household. Together, trained facility-based counselors,
patient advocates and community health workers (CHWs) counsel patients and their partners on treatment
literacy, positive living, nutrition, safe infant feeding practices, and safe sex. CHWs conduct pre-treatment
home visits and provide ongoing psychosocial support to patients and their families. They also promote and
support disclosure to partners and family, partner testing and facilitate treatment access. CHWs are
required to facilitate support groups for their clients and ensure that all patients and their families have
access to spiritual care, psychosocial support, prevention messaging including prevention with positives,
nutritional counseling, economic assistance (government grants), and protection services, when required.
ACTIVITY 5: Reporting and Quality Assurance/Improvement
information is used within the clinics to strengthen service delivery. To ensure high standards and quality of
care in line with the national guidelines, all ARK staff are provided onsite, on-the-job training. This is
followed up with regular onsite mentorship and site evaluation by ARK's national executive and provincial
management teams. Informal training sessions are conducted quarterly by national staff. Staff are also
encouraged to attend formal external training courses offered by FPD.
These activities contribute to PEPFAR's 2-7-10 goals by increasing the number of South Africans receiving
palliative care.
As part of a comprehensive treatment program, Absolute Return for Kids' (ARK) focus is to improve and
enhance TB screening and treatment services for HIV-infected patients and their families. ARK will train and
place required human resources (medical and counseling staff) and develop performance monitoring
systems to strengthen adherence monitoring. The primary emphasis area is human resources. The target
population is people living with HIV and AIDS (PLHIV) and HIV-affected families.
communities affected by HIV and AIDS and poverty. In partnership with the KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) provincial
government, ARK has established an HIV and AIDS treatment program in government primary health
facilities and hospitals. To date, PEPFAR funding has enabled ARK to successfully put over 15,000 patients
onto ARV treatment in KwaZulu-Natal. Dual infection rates of TB with HIV are very high. The Medical
Research Council reports the national rate at 58%. Many TB/HIV co-infected individuals are unaware of
their dual infection, and CT services for coinfection are limited or non-existent. With COP 08 funding, ARK
will continue its work to enhance and improve its HIV and AIDS treatment program by strengthening TB
screening, care and support services for HIV-infected patients and their families.
ARK will continue to work with the national and provincial departments of health and specifically with the
HAST (HIV, AIDS STI, and TB) managers to prioritize interventions designed to address weaknesses
(identified by the Departments of Health) in the DOTS and TB/HIV programs. ARK will focus on improving
policy adherence and patient follow-up. Individuals will be hired for each site as tracers to track patients and
ensure that referrals are completed. ARK is setting aside funding to develop (with other relevant partners or
agreement counterparts) standardized tools to ensure that policies and guidelines recommended by NDOH
are followed, including guidelines for infection control. ARK will continue to integrate TB/HIV interventions
with existing agreement programs as they work seamlessly and side by side with government employees at
government facilities.
ACTIVITY 1: Support to Provincial Government
ARK works with provincial government in developing the necessary processes and systems to manage the
HIV care and treatment program and to ensure that the model created is scaleable, sustainable and
replicable elsewhere. Specifically ARK has a mandate with provincial government to recruit and place
human resources (doctors, nurses and pharmacists) in public clinics for a maximum of three years. ARK
fully funds these positions, which will be taken over by provincial governments at the end of the period. The
clinicians provide screening for TB, CT for HIV, and treatment management including patient consultations
and treatment of opportunistic and sexually transmitted infections if necessary. ARK also provides training
and mentorship to government community health workers (CHWs) to improve and enhance TB/HIV co-
infected patient support. Community health workers provide care and support services including needs
assessment and psychosocial support, and serve as a link, during and after TB treatment, and between the
patient and the clinic to address patient needs. At government clinics, ARK strengthens data information
systems to enable clinics to provide quarterly updates to provincial government to improve ongoing
evaluation, data for outcomes computation and analysis.
Formal and informal training and on-site mentorship is provided to all CHWs. ARK, together with the Centre
for Social Science Research Unit, University of Cape Town, developed training modules for CHWs on HIV
and AIDS care. The areas covered include: TB/HIV coinfection, TB treatment guidelines for adults and
children, maternal and child care in the context of HIV and AIDS, and adherence to TB and ART treatment.
ARK provides overall supervision of the program, ensuring ongoing mentorship of the trained CHWs.
ACTIVITY 3: Screening for TB with HIV-infected Patients
All HIV-infected individuals entering the program will be assessed for the presence of active TB. An inquiry
about symptoms that would suggest active TB and any history of TB or known/likely exposure will be
ascertained. For patients who report that they have received treatment of active TB or latent TB in the past,
the adequacy of the treatment will be assessed. A physical examination that includes examination of extra-
pulmonary sites of disease, such as lymph nodes, and chest radiography will be performed. ARK clinical
and counseling staff will work with patients with infectious TB to identify their close contacts for screening
and preventative treatment. ARK will also integrate TB screening into established PMTCT programs at ARK
sites. HIV-infected patients who are candidates for, but who do not receive, TB preventive therapy will be
assessed periodically for symptoms of active TB as part of ongoing management of HIV infection.
ACTIVITY 4: CT for DOTS Program
Patients with TB constitute an important "sentinel" population for HIV screening. The benefits of identifying
previously unrecognized HIV infection are substantial in terms of both the opportunities for preventing future
HIV transmission and the large potential benefits to the patient of antiretroviral therapy. Knowledge of the
HIV sero-status of TB patients may also influence the treatment of their TB. ARK will work with established
DOTS programs in its sites to promote the routine offering of CT for TB patients in order to increase the
number of TB patients undergoing HIV CT. ARK will offer training to DOT supporters on HIV and AIDS and
coinfection, and treatment and referral options. ARK will work with healthcare providers, administrators, and
designated TB controllers to promote routine offering of CT and more coordinated care for patients with TB
and HIV in government clinics through strengthening, and in some cases, establishing referral systems
between the TB control programs and HIV and AIDS programs. Referrals and service use will be tracked to
monitor the use of CT services among TB clients. ARK will also facilitate the sharing of information from the
treatment program to the TB program and through the TB register. For TB patients who test positive for HIV,
ARK CHWs will ensure that patients who are awaiting ARV treatment are adequately informed about ART
Activity Narrative: and are prepared to take treatment adherently. All patients who are pre-assessed undergo a treatment
literacy program and are educated about "Positive Living." Patients are encouraged to motivate their
partners/spouses to get tested.
ACTIVITY 5: Treatment, Care and Support
Individuals accessing ARK's services will be staged and entered into ARK's ARV treatment program. The
program provides patient uptake, patient consultation, ongoing assessment and monitoring, CT and drug
provision. HIV-infected patients, without active TB and not in-need of ARV treatment, will be offered
isoniazid prophylaxis, monitoring, and ongoing counseling support for 6 months. At the end of the 6 months,
these patients will be reassessed for further treatment. HIV-infected patients with active TB will be linked
with DOT supporters and ARK's community health workers will provide them with ongoing TB treatment
management and support. Once the patient has been successfully treated for TB, ARK will enroll the patient
onto ART. Adherence support is a critical component, complementing clinical services. ARK utilizes a family
centered approach for care and treatment. ARK-trained CHWs conduct pre-treatment home visits and
provide ongoing psychosocial support to patients and their families. CHWs promote and support disclosure
to partners and family, partner testing and facilitate treatment access. CHWs are required to facilitate
support groups for their clients and ensure that all patients and their families have access to grants, spiritual
support and psychological support and counseling where indicated. ARK will strive to identify children
needing TB treatment and ART through ARK's OVC care and support, and CT programs. This activity will
contribute to PEPFAR goals of 2-7-10 by providing care and treatment to many South Africans through
ARK's TB/HIV program.
ARK's activities are aimed at improving the lives of orphans and other children made vulnerable by HIV and
AIDS through strengthening school communities to meet the needs of orphans and vulnerable children
(OVC); identifying OVC and assisting them to access government social grants, community support as well
as appropriate referral to health facilities; and nutritional support through establishing sustainable food
gardens in the schools. The primary emphasis areas for these activities are training and local organization
capacity development. Specific target populations include the general population from children less than 5
years to adults, OVC and their caregivers.
communities affected by HIV and AIDS and poverty.
In partnership with the KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) provincial government, ARK has established a comprehensive
antiretroviral HIV and AIDS treatment program in government primary health centers and hospitals.
Specifically, ARK works with the provincial government to identify sites and areas for capacity building
including human resources, human capacity development, and modest infrastructure. Last year with other
donor funds, the ARK Child Services program piloted its interventions through schools and community care
workers to identify and assist OVC to access government grants; improve access to health facilities; access
counseling; and providing a seven-day school-based feeding and sustainable food gardens. To date 5,000
children from 12 schools in rural KZN are fed daily; 687 children have been assisted to access grants; 461
children referred to health facilities; 1000 received the services of social workers; and 50 destitute families
were provided with monthly food parcels. With FY 2008 PEPFAR funding, ARK will expand its child services
program in KZN communities.
ARK's activities will be implemented in partnership with the provincial government of KZN, specifically with
Departments of Education, Health and Social Development. The KZN Departments of Education and Social
Development support the expansion of this project
ARK will work with provincial government to develop the necessary processes and systems to manage the
OVC program and to ensure that the model created is scaleable, sustainable and replicable. ARK will
employ social workers and nursing staff to work with the local government schools in linking sick children to
primary healthcare facilities at which ARK's ARV treatment program is in place.
ACTIVITY 2: Community Mobilization
This activity will mobilize and empower school communities to meet the needs of OVC. Schools will form
clusters (4 - 8 schools per cluster) around primary healthcare facilities at which ARK's ARV program is in
place. These schools will be empowered with knowledge, skills and strategies to plan, execute and monitor
interventions that respond to the needs of orphans and vulnerable children attending their schools. This
activity will provide a strong base in the community by utilizing available resources (schools and educators)
to ensure that vulnerable children are cared for. This activity is in line with one of the key strategies of the
government to mobilize and strengthen community-based responses for the care, support and protection of
orphans and other children made vulnerable by HIV and AIDS. ARK will develop a tool which accurately
and reliably identifies children who fit the profile of the target population including those in need of grants
who have not accessed one.
ACTIVITY 3: Healthcare Support
Each cluster of schools will be allocated at least one registered community health nurse who will visit the
schools to assist with the identification of sick children needing ARV treatment and other health services.
ARK will develop a tool which accurately and reliably identifies children who fit the profile of ARK's target
population; HIV-infected children and those in need of ARV treatment. Each cluster of schools will have a
social worker who will oversee home visits; conduct needs assessments and refers sick siblings in the
household to the relevant healthcare facility.
ACTIVITY 3: Economic and Social Support
Community care workers (CCW) will be recruited to assist orphans and vulnerable children in accessing
suitable social and health facilities. These community workers (3-4 community workers per school) will be
trained to identify OVC, follow-up through home visits, conduct needs assessments, and assist with access
to birth certificates and government grants. Each cluster of schools will have a social worker who will be
responsible for supervising the community workers and following up the more serious cases. The CCW will
co-ordinate the referral system between teachers and community workers and will ensure appropriate case
management. The community workers will also be trained to facilitate support groups for the children
especially groups for child-headed households and will focus on special needs of girls.
ACTIVITY 4: Food Security
ARK will provide nutrition support through the establishment of food gardens in the cluster of schools.
Schools will work with the community workers to initiate food gardens. ARK will partner with KZN provincial
government, specifically the Department of Agriculture's extension officers, and other NGOs that provide
training for the development of food gardens and ongoing agricultural support. ARK will provide the
resources such as gardening equipment, services of an agricultural organization to train and mentor the
schools for the sustainability of the food gardens.
ACTIVITY 5: Capacity development
ARK will provide both formal and informal training per cluster for two social workers, 18 - 24 community care
workers, as well as 80 educators and institutional management teams in the schools. ARK will utilize
existing and will develop specialized training modules where needed, that will address topics such as: the
developmental stages of the child (male and female); grant access; child protection, special needs of the girl
child, and minimizing stigma. Training of community workers will be conducted in collaboration with
accredited service providers such as the National Association of Child Care Workers (NACCW). The Valley
Trust will provide training in establishing food gardens. ARK will provide overall support and supervision to
the project, ensuring ongoing mentorship of the trained groups, as well as liaison with other partners for
knowledge sharing and identifying opportunities for growth. Through home visits, Child Care workers (CCW)
will be able to train and support caregivers to better care for their children.
ACTIVITY 6: Referrals and Linkages
ARK works in partnership with other NGOs, local government and government departments. ARK has had
extensive consultations with the Departments of Education, Health and Social Development to ensure
support of this program. Other local service providers, NGOs, CBOs and FBOs will be identified for referrals
to and from ARK services.
The Department of Social Development has acknowledged the significant contributions from ARK in the
policy development processes for OVC and this will continue. ARK participates in the National Action
Committee for Children Affected by HIV and AIDS (NACCA).
ARK's OVC activities directly contribute to the PEPFAR goal of 2-7-10 by providing care to 10 million
people, including OVC.
ARK's focus is to provide antiretroviral treatment (ART) and accompanying support to primary HIV-infected
caregivers with children. This includes the encouragement and support for the voluntary counseling and
testing (CT) of partners and children, to ensure complete family coverage and earlier access to ongoing
treatment, care and support. Although the primary focus of ARK is on the caregivers of children, ARK offers
its services to the entire population in all of its service areas. CT services will be delivered in all of ARK's
supported communities.
The primary emphasis areas for these activities are community mobilization, local organization capacity
development, human resources, and training. Primary target populations include adult women and men and
their families.
ART program in government primary health centers and hospitals. ARK works with the provincial
government to identify sites and areas for capacity building in areas such as human resources, human
capacity development, modest infrastructure improvements and service delivery. ARK's activities enable the
provincial government to increase the number of patients counseled, tested, and provided ART and related
services.
To date, PEPFAR funding has enabled ARK to successfully provide over 15,000 patients onto ART in KZN
through the sustained development of primary care facilities and their down referral sites in five districts, in
primarily peri-urban and rural communities.
With FY 2008 funding, ARK will focus on provider driven opt-out testing to all pregnant mothers entering the
antenatal clinics, and CT services to children and spouses/partners of caregivers and other household
members. This activity will be linked to home visits undertaken by ARK's community adherence workers.
Home visits serve to evaluate the psychosocial situation of patients, the degree of family support, and
issues related to disclosure. Although ARK's treatment target population is predominantly mothers,
caregivers, and their spouses/partners and children, increased attention is given to encourage men, single
women and children to come forward for testing and treatment.
ARK's primary objective is to keep mothers alive to continue caring for their children and to reduce the
incidence of orphans and vulnerable children (OVC). Early, widespread testing and access to ART reduces
the likelihood of morbidity and mortality from HIV. This, in turn, increases the likelihood of survival of family
units, which guard income security and ongoing nurturing required by children in these households.
Furthermore, the psychosocial component of counseling and testing forms a vital component for behavior
change.
ACTIVITY 1: Support to Provincial Government for CT Services
ARK works with the KZN provincial government to develop the necessary processes and systems to
manage a comprehensive HIV and AIDS treatment program, and to ensure that the model created is
scaleable, sustainable and replicable elsewhere. ARK, in partnership with KZN provincial government, will
provide training and mentoring for government employed lay counselors and community adherence workers
working at these primary sites where ARK's ART program exists. ARK will ensure that management
systems are in place to support the work of the counselors and the delivery of CT.
ARK will strengthen or initiate CT services at all sites identified by the provincial health department and
assigned to ARK for support. To better ensure sustainability, where possible, ARK will use the counselors
available through the district HIV program. ARK will also employ counselors and train existing employed
community care workers to provide counseling for CT services. Where infrastructure support is required,
ARK will, in consultation with the facility managers and district managers, decide on the most cost-effective
infrastructure support (prefab or modest renovations). ARK's OVC program, through the social workers and
community workers placed at schools, will establish links with clinic services to ensure better and more
efficient referral of children in need of testing and care, including their caregivers and immediate family.
Formal and informal training and on-site mentorship will be provided to all lay counselors in the program.
continue to develop and improve training modules for lay counselors. The areas covered in training include
reduction for HIV transmission, and safer sex. Counseling and ongoing training will be in line with the
National Department of Health's (NDOH) guidelines. ARK will provide mentorship and supportive
supervision to lay counselors in the program to ensure high-quality standards for CT. Nurses conduct
testing, in accordance with NDOH standards, at the CT sites. Support in terms of systems management and
coordination of lay counseling will be provided to CT sites.
ACTIVITY 3: Referrals and Linkages
Community care workers and social workers will be recruited to assist OVC and their caregivers in
accessing ARK-assisted primary health facilities for CT. They will coordinate the referral system between
caregivers, children and CT services. ARK will inform and coordinate activities with local NGOs, CBOs, and
FBOs to establish effective referral networks for CT services. Lay counselors will refer HIV-infected
individuals to ARK's ART sites.
Activity Narrative: SUMMARY:
ARK's focus is to provide ART and accompanying support to HIV-infected caregivers of children, their
spouses, and children. Primary emphasis areas are renovation, human capacity development, and local
organization capacity building. Target populations include OVC, people living with HIV (PLHIV), HIV-
infected pregnant women, HIV-affected families, and caregivers.
communities affected by HIV and AIDS. In partnership with the KwaZulu-Natal Department of Health
(KZNDOH), ARK, as the implementing partner, has established an antiretroviral treatment program in
government primary health facilities and hospitals. Specifically, ARK works with the KZNDOH to identify
sites and areas for capacity building, including human resources, modest infrastructure support, and
organizational capacity development. PEPFAR funding has enabled ARK to successfully enroll over 15,000
patients in ART in KZN. FY 2008 funding will enable ARK to provide ARV treatment to existing and new
patients, strengthen the infrastructure of the ARV delivery system in targeted sites, provide human
resources, and build local institutional capacity to deliver ARV services. ARK provides treatment in
accordance with national treatment guidelines.
ACTIVITY 1: Support to KwaZulu-Natal Department of Health
ARK works with the KZNDOH to develop the necessary processes and systems to manage the ARV
program, to ensure that the model created is scaleable, sustainable and replicable elsewhere. Capacity-
building is site specific. Upon identification of a site, an analysis of the needs of each site will be done with
respect to staffing (doctors, nurses, pharmacists and pharmacy assistants), clinical equipment,
met in order to speed up the ability of patients to receive treatment. Where necessary ARK provides
ARK's ARV program focuses on a network of clinics operating within a district, in order to create a
sustainable and efficient system that supports the continuum of care and up and down referral. While
patients are being assessed for treatment, a community health worker (CHW) from ARK's palliative care
program is allocated to the patient. This CHW will conduct a pre-treatment home visit and will provide
ongoing support to the patient and his/her family. Should a patient be non-adherent or lost-to-follow-up, the
CHW will investigate the reasons for this, acting as the link between the patient and the clinic. ARK
facilitates the integration process for ART, TB, other palliative care, and maternal HIV services.
ACTIVITY 2: Human Resources
ARK conducts a thorough needs analysis of human resource capacity prior to initiating support to the
treatment program at each site. Once it has been determined that KZNDOH has budgeted for the identified
posts needed within a period of three years, ARK recruits all the necessary medical staff required for the
successful rollout of ART. The staff recruited vary from site to site but include doctors, nurses, pharmacists
and pharmacy assistants. In addition ARK employs data capturers for monitoring and evaluation of the
program.
ACTIVITY 3: Family-Centered Treatment Services
Although ARK's primary goal is to provide ARV service support to primary caregivers with children, ARK
assists in the treatment of all HIV-infected adults and children requiring ART at ARK sites in KZN. All
patients considered for ART need to meet both medical and psychosocial criteria before starting therapy.
The psychosocial criteria are designed to ensure that the patient is prepared and ready to adhere to ART.
All patients being assessed undergo a treatment literacy program and are educated about positive living.
treatment program. Although ARK's treatment target population is predominantly mothers and children,
increased attention is being given to encourage and increase male partner (and men in general)
participation. ARK-employed doctors and nurses are responsible for treatment management, patient
consultations and the treatment of opportunistic and sexually transmitted infections. Pharmacists are
responsible for the dispensing of medication.
ACTIVITY 4: Pediatrics
HIV-infected parents and caregivers will be encouraged and educated by the medical staff to get their
children tested and to enter the treatment program where indicated. Staff in the local midwifery and
obstetric units will be trained to refer HIV-infected mothers and their babies to the ARK ART program,
ensuring access to full ART services when indicated. All at-risk infected infants with HIV diagnosis
confirmed by PCR will be monitored, and have immediate access to ARVs and related services including
the preventive package of care. Children identified through ARK's OVC program (also PEPFAR-funded) will
be referred to the clinic by community care workers and social workers.
ACTIVITY 5: Human Capacity Development
Key staff are provided with a two week orientation training which covers all aspects of ARK's ARV program
areas including employee policies and procedures, onsite mentorship from experienced ARK staff, and an
introduction to key performance areas. The areas covered in training include: ARV treatment guidelines for
adults and children, adherence, opportunistic and sexually transmitted infections as well as the value of
Activity Narrative: community access, adherence and refresher on prevention, including prevention for HIV-infected people.
ACTIVITY 6: Reporting and Quality Assurance/Improvement
death rates and loss-to-follow-up are closely monitored. Quarterly updates are provided to the KZNDOH
and information is used within the clinics to strengthen service delivery. To ensure high standards and
quality of care in line with the national guidelines, all ARK staff are provided onsite, on-the-job training. This
is followed up with regular onsite mentorship and site evaluation by ARK's national executive and provincial
treatment.