Our Group organises 3000+ Global Conferenceseries Events every year across USA, Europe & Asia with support from 1000 more scientific Societies and Publishes 700+ Open Access Journals which contains over 50000 eminent personalities, reputed scientists as editorial board members.
The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) pandemic presents a significant challenge to global tuberculosis (TB) control.
Worldwide, TB is the most opportunistic infection affecting HIV positive individuals, and it remains the most common cause
of death in patients with AIDS. To address the dual burden of TB/HIV, World Health Organization (WHO) developed guidelines
promoting the collaboration of the two programmes to achieve holistic patient care. However, in most African countries this policy
is often not implemented at the level of patient care contributing to delayed diagnosis and linkage to care. In Africa, the control of
TB/HIV a co-infection remains a major challenge despite the availability of international guidelines of TB/HIV services. Hence
this study seeks to systematically review the impact of TB/HIV collaborative services in Africa. In order to identify relevant studies,
electronic database: Pubmed, Embase, CIHNAL and Sabinet were searched from 2005 to end of august 2013. The general search
structure for electronic databases was impact of or synonyms and collaboration or integration and TB/HIV or TB-HIV or TB and
HIV and services in Africa. Further studies were identified by citations in retrieved papers and by consultation with experts. The
level of integration seems to vary according to country and facility. It was evident that the impact of TB/HIV integration is somewhat
difficult to rigorously measure; hence rigorous evaluative studies are needed to measure the impact of TB/HIV integration. This is due
to different models of integration employed in different facilities and countries in Africa.