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FG, WHO train Health Workers to boost HIV prevention uptake

by Haruna Gimba
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By Muhammad Amaan

The Federal Government, in collaboration with the World Health Organization (WHO), has commenced training of health workers to accelerate the uptake of Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP), including Lenacapavir, for HIV prevention.

Organised by the National AIDS, Viral Hepatitis and STI Control Programme (NASCP) and WHO, the three-day National Training of Trainers began on Tuesday in Abuja, with participants drawn from 18 northern states.

Speaking at the event, Dr Mya Ngon, Cluster Lead for Disease Prevention and Control at WHO Nigeria, said the training was critical to strengthening Nigeria’s HIV prevention workforce.

She said the initiative aligned with WHO’s mandate to support member states in achieving universal health coverage and strengthening health systems.

“This training is taking place at a pivotal moment in Nigeria’s HIV response as the country scales up oral PrEP, long-acting cabotegravir and introduces newer innovations such as Lenacapavir,” she said.

She said that building a skilled and competent workforce was essential for delivering effective HIV prevention services nationwide.

“Training a new cadre of national and state-level trainers who will cascade quality PrEP services across Nigeria is a vital investment,” she said.

Dr Ngon said WHO was providing technical and financial support to ensure adherence to global and national guidelines in delivering high-quality PrEP services.

She added that participants drawn from multiple disciplines would strengthen collaboration in delivering client-centred HIV prevention services.

“PrEP delivery is a collaborative effort requiring medical doctors, nurses, pharmacists, programme teams and communities working together,” she said.

Ngon said the trainees would be equipped to mentor healthcare providers and expand access to evidence-based prevention services nationwide.

The Lead for PrEP at NASCP, Mr Taiwo Olakunle, said the training was designed to expand the pool of master trainers across the country.

“We observed that the number of master trainers was not enough, so we extended the pool to include more participants,” he said.

Mr Olakunle said Nigeria had an estimated 1.9 million people living with HIV as of 2024, with prevalence at 1.3 per cent among persons aged 15 to 49.

He said new infections declined from 110,000 in 2015 to 48,000 in 2024, though unprotected heterosexual intercourse remained the major mode of transmission.

He added that key populations bore a disproportionate burden, making them a priority for PrEP interventions.

Mr Olakunle described PrEP as the use of antiretroviral medicines by HIV-negative individuals to prevent infection before exposure.

“PrEP is different from post-exposure prophylaxis and antiretroviral therapy and should be combined with other prevention strategies,” he said.

He emphasised that combination prevention, integrating biomedical, behavioural and structural approaches, remained the most effective strategy for reducing HIV transmission.

Programme Officer at the National Agency for the Control of AIDS (NACA), Mr Umar Ibrahim said scaling up PrEP remained a priority under Nigeria’s national HIV prevention strategy.

“PrEP is one of the priority interventions we aim to scale up, and this training is key to achieving that goal,” he said.

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