AFFIDAVIT I, the undersigned, TSHIDI MAHLONOKO Hereby make oath and state: 1. I am a 46-year old woman, and a senior professional nurse. I am a volunteer of the Treatment Action Campaign and a member of the TAC committee in the Vaal Triangle. 2. The facts in the affidavit fall within my personal knowledge unless otherwise apparent or otherwise stated and are to the best of my knowledge true and correct. 3. I qualified as a senior professional nurse in 1976, and have worked at the Boipatong Clinic which is falls under the Local Council in the Vaal for the past 15 years. 4. In 1993 I was part of the first groups of nurses to be sent for training for HIV/AIDS counseling. In 1996 I was trained as a trainer in HIV Counseling, and in the year 2000 I was trained as a facilitator. 5. My responsibilities as a nurse are to provide a comprehensive Primary Health Care service to the community. This includes examining patients, clinical assessments, diagnoses and referring patients where appropriate. I deal with treatment of sexually transmitted infections, post natal care of newborn babies and chronic diseases including AIDS. 6. I have been working as a nurse in the field of HIV and AIDS for seven years now, working as a counselor. During this period I have also belonged to a Faith Based Organisation called Christian AIDS Awareness. I was responsible for training and raising awareness in the community about HIV and AIDS. 7. For these seven years I have seen and experienced the hopes and despairs of the community about this epidemic. 8. I first became aware of treatment that could control the spread of HIV and treat AIDS when I read about the controversy over the toxicity of AZT. 9. More recently I have become aware of drugs like fluconazole and Nevirapine and how anti retroviral treatment works. 10. For me this news was a blessing in that after we had done so much to try to manage AIDS, now there was a way forward. This gave me hope and motivated me and other nurses who are the service renderers. It also gave hope to the people living with HIV and those affected by this disease. 11. It gave me an idea that people will now begin to change their behaviour because of treatment and because they believe that we can do something about the infection of HIV by giving them treatment, so they will be convinced to come forward for tests. 12. When someone comes to a clinic or hospital they come with the hope that they will be listened to, understood, examined, educated about their illness and treated. 13. With the restructuring of the health care system with level one and level two care, I am at the primary health care level. I have been given the huge responsibility of treating various basic illnesses. For more advanced debilitating illnesses I have to refer patients to the hospital. I am now at the frontline. I have become the first point of contact with the people from the community. This also means that I am the first line of attack. 14. I do both pre-test and post-test counseling for HIV. For those people who are HIV positive I talk to them and try to console them, but instead of then giving them treatment for their infection, like I do for other diseases, I give these patients plenty of stories. This is worst of all with a mother who is pregnant and has just found out she is HIV positive. 15. In this case the procedure is as follows. I should counsel the mother, and test her only with her agreement and consent, and then I must administer the package. This includes advising her of what are her legal rights. I inform her that she can choose to go for a legal termination of the pregnancy, or she can choose to keep the baby. 16. If she chooses to keep the baby, I then have to give her information on the safest method of delivery, how to maintain a health baby during pregnancy, and then information on post-natal care, including feeding options and good nutrition for the baby, and also how she must look after herself. This includes safe sex, and information about nutrition and her life style in general. 17. But for me the whole package, especially for a pregnant mother who is HIV positive, is naked. This is because in the Sedibeng Municipality, Nevirapine is not available, which is what would then make this package complete. 18. Since May 2001 alone, I have referred 3 mothers who are HIV positive and pregnant to the Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital for Nevirapine. These women ranged in ages from 22 years to their thirties. This is very inconvenient, and poor women have to pay a lot of money to get to Soweto from the Vaal. 19. I am aware that Nevirapine reduces the risk of the transmission of HIV from a pregnant mother who is HIV positive to her unborn child. If I was not aware of Nevirapine I would have been content that the package that I was delivering to my patients was complete, and I would feel content and confident. I would feel that I am helping my community to the best of my ability by delivering my priorities. 20. I have heard that some of the reasons provided as to why Nevirapine cannot be made available more widely at clinics and hospitals are difficulties of controlling the administering of the drug. 21. In my opinion we should not restrict the control system by stocking Nevirapine at one hospital with one person in charge of the drug. I think that it is possible and advisable to make NVP available at all levels of the health system. The chief person in charge of the services being delivered according to the primary health care system can take responsibility for administering Nevirapine. 22. With Nevirapine the rules are clear. You must give it to the mother as soon as she goes into labour. She must deliver the baby at best within four hours. And the baby must have a dose of the syrup within 72 hours of birth. 23. Like with all other diseases and treatments, nurses can be trained on possible side effects of the drug and how to deal with this. 24. As a nurse, depending on how senior you are, you are qualified to administer specific drugs accordingly. For example you start with permit medication, which qualifies you to order basic drugs like antibiotics, painkillers and vitamins. 25. At the primary health care level, I go beyond this and my medication box must contain the drugs as per the Essential Drug List for the provision of primary health care. I am trained and qualified in pharmacology. 26. At present with the staff cuts we have one doctor for the whole of the Sedibeng area. We have 13 satellite clinics and this doctor serves all 13 clinics. He goes sessionally to each clinic spending a maximum of two hours at a clinic. So for the rest of the time, when the doctor is not present he delegates his powers to the nurse in charge, to provide treatment. 27. As a nurse who is responsible for setting up systems of control for drugs of this nature, I would suggest the following workable system. The patient starts with the counselor, and the doctor can confirm the patient's status with the consent of the patient. The patient is monitored and given all the relevant information. The nurse will administer Nevirapine at the appropriate time, and ensure that the relevant information is recorded on the drug register available. This register is used for potentially harmful toxic drugs like Valium and morphine. 28. As I understand it, every drug has side effects. Even aspirin has side effects, and can cause an adverse reaction in some people depending on their immune system, threshold of tolerance for a drug, etc. 29. I also want to mention the other important component of a programme to prevent mother to child transmission of HIV. This is counseling. I counsel about 60 people a month in relation to HIV. Of this number 70% of the Voluntary Counseling and Testing (VCT) that is done by me, is referred to as self-referral. This is as a consequence of the community education on HIV and AIDS, and people decide as individuals to go for an HIV test. About 25% of VCT every month is done on people with repeated attendance at the clinic. This refers specifically to those people who present with signs and symptoms commonly putting them in a high-risk category. This largely refers to sexually transmitted diseases and TB which does not respond to treatment. 30. The last 5% of VCT are those referred to clinic by the private sector. Many of these patients come with a sealed letter addressed to the "sister in charge" The letter contains the following: Please counsel! 31. This is the present counseling system. I would say that of all the counseling that we provide at the Boipatong, clinic we have a 45% success rate. Success refers to the patients who have been diagnosed with HIV who join a support group or keep in contact with the clinic. 32. I think that this number will increase if we keep our promise of providing treatment for people with HIV. With anti-retroviral treatment my job will be complete. 33. If we make drugs available to manage HIV then we would not be wasting time and money with court cases. We will be improving the life span of poor people, and at the same time strengthen the confidence of the community in the government and the health sector. 34. At present nurses portray a negative image to the community, that as nurses we are not interested and do not care for people living with HIV and AIDS, because we do not want to provide treatment and that we are not interested in counseling because we are too busy. 35. That is the picture the community gets about us. The more negative picture we get as nurses, and the more we are attacked as nurses the more we will pull back and hence the high level of demoralization. __________________________ TSHIDI MAHLONOKO THUS SIGNED AND SWORN TO ME AT ………………………………. On this day of August 2001 by the Deponent who has declared that she has read this affidavit, understands the contents thereof and has no objection to taking the prescribed oath, and regards the same as binding on her conscience. ________________________________ COMMISSIONER OF OATHS 1