treatment interruption

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What Are the Cross-Border Health Coordination Challenges Between South Africa and Neighboring SADC Countries?

Breaking Down Borders, Building Health Systems: The Cross-Border Coordination Crisis in Southern Africa Introduction: When Borders Become Barriers to Health Maria, a 34-year-old Mozambican mother living in Nkomazi, South Africa, discovered she was HIV-positive during antenatal care. Immediately, healthcare workers started her treatment. However, when she returned to Mozambique for a family emergency three months […]

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migrants South Africa, chronic disease, medication access, affordable medication, HIV, TB, diabetes, hypertension, undocumented migrants, asylum seekers, refugees, healthcare barriers, medical xenophobia, public health, health policy, National Health Act, NHI Act, South African health system, treatment interruption, self-medication, disease progression, MDR-TB, opportunistic infections, healthcare exclusion, migrant health, health inequalities, social determinants of health, health system costs, community health, NGO healthcare programs, MSF Tshwane Migrant Project, health rights, constitutional health rights, patient adherence, healthcare advocacy, health equity, migrant-friendly clinics, healthcare access, chronic disease management, health policy gaps, South African cities, Gauteng migrants, KwaZulu-Natal migrants, Tshwane migrants, public clinics, health information systems, continuity of care, health surveillance, public health risks, peer-support networks, emergency care, tertiary care, healthcare discrimination, inclusive healthcare, legal protection for migrants, healthcare interventions, evidence-based solutions, social networks, treatment adherence, vulnerable populations, intersectional health, healthcare research gaps

What Happens When Migrants with Chronic Diseases Can’t Access Affordable Medication in South Africa?

When Chronic Illness Meets Barriers: Migrants Struggling to Access Medication in South Africa A human story, and why it matters In early 2025, a 34‑year-old Zimbabwean woman — we’ll call her “Amina” — living in Johannesburg was diagnosed with hypertension. After losing her job, she could no longer afford private care. At her local public

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Documentation and Legal Pathways: Creating Accessible Immigration Processes

 Accessible Immigration Processes Opening: The Documentation Dilemma Maria, a Zimbabwean nurse working in Cape Town’s public health system, spent three days navigating between Home Affairs offices, losing critical work hours while attempting to renew her work permit. Meanwhile, Ahmad, a Syrian refugee in Johannesburg, delayed seeking HIV treatment for six months due to uncertain documentation

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TB, HIV, and Migration: Understanding Disease Patterns and Prevention Challenges Among African Migrants in South Africa

 Understanding Disease Patterns and Prevention Challenges How migration dynamics, exclusionary policies, and fragile health systems fuel dual epidemics—and what must be done to change course. A Tale of Two Crises: The Migrant’s Health Journey In May 2022, Awa, a 29-year-old undocumented woman from the DRC, sought treatment at a community clinic in Durban after experiencing

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