A major cause of death for people living with well treated HIV under the age of 50 is suicide and not the virus itself. This goes to show the critical role of mental health in the fight against the epidemic. People living with HIV have significantly higher risk of developing mental health disorders. If not addressed, we are unlikely to achieve the 90-90-90 goals or ultimately end the epidemic. The speaker, Dr. Robert H. Remien, a Professor of Clinical Psychology in Columbia University, identified mental health to be a risk factor of HIV infection stating that it contributes to 4-10 times increased risk of acquiring HIV.

 

In the context of PrEP implementation, depression is associated with higher sexual risk behavior and poor adherence thus indicating that screening and treatment for mental health problems would be important to maximize the efficacy of PrEP.

 

Although HIV stigma may not be as glaring as it used to be in the early days of its discovery, its impact is still quite strong today though it manifests subtly with very harmful effects. Unfortunately, the mental health related stigma occur at multiple levels – patients, health care workers and policy makers.
Mental health stigma is often coupled with HIV stigma for people living with HIV. Depression is the most prevalent mental health condition in HIV. Studies have shown that women on ART with depressive symptoms are 2-3 more times the risk of mortality compared to women without depressive symptoms when on ART. Hence, while ART is most certainly protective, depression doubles the risk of mortality.

 

In addition to depression, other psychiatric problems such as anxiety disorder, alcohol and other substance use disorder and Post traumatic stress disorders are associated with living with HIV.
Mental health impairment may lead to increased risk behavior, delayed (or lack of) HIV testing and care initiation, poor retention in care, delayed ART initiation and poor adherence. It is clear that mental health problems need to be addressed in order to improve HIV prevention and care related health outcomes. 
Majority of people with mental health disorders across the globe do not receive care because of the exiting gap in access to mental health treatment in general. There is a shortage in human resource, lack of capacity for implementation and poor mental health related policy in place in many countries for many programmes. 

 

As a way forward and an opportunity for intervention, Dr Remien proposed metal health screening across the spectrum of the HIV continuum: when accessing STI testing, at the point of offering and implementation of PrEP, when testing for HIV, when reporting a HIV positive diagnosis, and at the point of ART initiation. This would enhance the detection of mental health problems on time, mitigate its effect on HIV treatment and care, improve adherence to treatment, increase viral load suppression, improve health outcomes for the individual, and ultimately reduce ongoing HIV transmission.

– Alaka Oluwatosin