HIV mothers and breastfeeding

People need to understand that the health of the mother and her own treatment are the most important things to consider towards ensuring a healthy baby. Recently approved research by the World Health Organization (WHO) reveals that HIV positive mothers who are taking anti-retro viral drugs can breast feed their babies with out transmission of the virus to them.

Thursday, May 06, 2010

People need to understand that the health of the mother and her own treatment are the most important things to consider towards ensuring a healthy baby.

Recently approved research by the World Health Organization (WHO) reveals that HIV positive mothers who are taking anti-retro viral drugs can breast feed their babies with out transmission of the virus to them.

Annet Makagaju is a 37 year-old mother who has been exposed to the virus since 1998 and last year gave birth to a healthy baby girl.

"I have been taking anti-retroviral drugs for 10 years and when I gave birth to a healthy baby, doctors advised me to continue breast feeding and she has been tested negative and free from HIV infection three times,”  she said
HIV-positive pregnant women are people who need adequate care to safeguard their unborn babies. Our community sometimes tends to neglect or forget such mothers.

Prevention of transmission and the health of the unborn baby have a direct link to the health of the mother.

Prenatal counseling for HIV-positive woman should always include; advice and discussion about how to prevent mother to child transmission, information about treating the mother’s own HIV during pregnancy and information about treating the mother’s HIV in the future.

Healthcare workers should provide information, education and counseling that is impartial, supportive and non judgmental. HIV should be intensively monitored during pregnancy. This is particularly important as the time of delivery approaches.

Opportunistic infections should be treated appropriately. Anti-HIV drugs should be used to reduce viral load to undetectable levels. Mothers should be treated in the best way to protect them from developing resistance to HIV drugs.

Additionally, mothers should be able to make informed choices regarding how and when their babies will be born.
It is important to note that mother to child transmission (MTCT) can occur before, during and after birth.

Scientists have found several possible reasons for infection. Besides the mother’s viral load, her low CD4 count (CD4 are defense cells in the body) and whether she has AIDS illnesses make it more likely.

The exposure of the baby to a mother’s infected blood or other body fluids during pregnancy and delivery, as well as breastfeeding are how transmission happens.
But most transmissions happen during delivery. More rarely, some infections happen during pregnancy . This is called in-utero transmission.

Transmission during pregnancy (in-utero)may happen if the placenta is damaged, making it possible for HIV-infected blood from the mother to transfer into the blood circulation of the fetus.

This happens either via infected cells traveling across the placenta, or by progressive infection of different layers of the placenta until the virus reaches the fetus placental circulation.

The reason we know that in utero transmission that happens is a proportion of HIV-positive babies tested when they are a few days old already have detectable virus in their blood. The rapid progression of HIV disease in some babies has also made scientists conclude that this happens.

Having a high viral load, AIDS and a low CD4 make in utero transmission more likely. Having TB (tuberculosis) at the same time also makes it more likely and HIV makes in utero transmission of TB more likely.

Transmission during labour and delivery is thought to happen when the baby comes into contact with infected blood and genital fluids and secretions from the mother as it passes through the birth canal.

This could happen through ascending infection from the vagina or cervix to the fetus and amniotic fluid (fluid surrounding the fetus), and through absorption in the digestive system of the baby.

Alternatively, during contractions in labour, maternal-fetal transfusion of a small quantity of blood may occur.

Scientists know that transmission occurs during delivery because 50 per cent of HIV-positive babies test HIV-negative in the first few days of life. There is also a rapid increase in the rate of detection of HIV in babies during the first week of life.

The way that the virus and the immune system behave in some newborn babies is similar to that of adults when they first become infected.

This can be prevented by lowering the mother’s viral load with ARVs; and delivering the baby by Cesarean section (surgical means) before labour starts.

If it takes longer to deliver after the membranes have ruptured (membranes are tissues where a baby is confined and sheltered in the mothers womb),  risk of transmission in women not receiving ARV treatment is increased.
A premature baby may be at a higher risk of HIV transmission than a full term baby.

Fact file HIV and breastfeeding

For HIV-positive mothers, WHO recommends exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months unless replacement feeding is:
• acceptable (socially welcome)
• feasible (facilities and help are available
            to prepare formula)
• affordable (formula can be purchased
            for six months)
• sustainable (feeding can be sustained
            for six months)
• safe (formula is prepared with safe water and
             in hygienic conditions).

josephmunich06@yahoo.co.uk