God, AIDS, Africa & HOPE

Reflections / Gedanken

POZ Magazine: Africa and China Partner to Fight HIV/AIDS

Leaders from Africa and China have come together in a new partnership to make progress toward the U.N. Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which include strengthening the global response to HIV/AIDS, according to a Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) statement. The countries involved seek to end an era of working in isolation by sharing technologies, promoting innovation, strengthening health care systems and improving access to social welfare programs.

To read the UNAIDS statement, click here

Source:

http://www.poz.com/rssredir/articles/South_South_Partnership_1_19175.shtml

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, Politics and Society, , , ,

…sterilized without consent?

Local rights groups in Namibia have uncovered 15 instances of women being sterilized after being diagnosed with HIV, PlusNews reports. Sterilization without informed consent, a severe human rights violation, has been described as “fairly widespread and systemic” in Namibia, and similar examples have been documented in neighboring Zambia and South Africa. Many of the women have declined to go to court because infertility carries a strong stigma in southern Africa.

To read the PlusNews article, click here.

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, HIV Treatment, Politics and Society, , , , , ,

For the first time: China Court to Hear HIV Discrimination Case

A court in China’s Anhui province has agreed to hear a lawsuit involving a prospective schoolteacher who says he was denied a job because he is HIV positive, The New York Times reports. The case is based on a 2006 government regulation stating that “no institution or individual shall discriminate against people living with HIV, AIDS patients and their relatives.” In the four years that the regulation has been in force, this is believed to be the first time that a Chinese court has accepted an HIV discrimination case.

To read the New York Times article, click here.

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, Politics and Society, , , , ,

Austria de-criminalizes safer sex for a person living with HIV

The organization GGG in Austria announces that the Ministry of Justice in a letter to the Austrian AIDS Society indicated that a person living with HIV and having safer sex can not be criminalized in Austria anymore. The ministry even goes further accepting that a person on effective treatment can not be considered infectious even when having unprotected sexual intercourse. Here the original text of the website in German language:

http://www.ggg.at/index.php?id=62&tx_ttnews[tt_news]=3436&cHash=a091a592bb5bbfd02109906933efd69a

Bis jetzt haben sich HIV-Positive in Österreich auf jeden Fall strafbar gemacht, wenn sie Sex hatten – auch mit Kondom und nicht nachweisbarer Viruslast. Das hat sich jetzt geändert.

Grundlage für die Kriminalisierung HIV-Positiver sind die Paragraphen 178 und 179 des Strafgesetzbuches über die “Gefährdung von Menschen durch übertragbare Krankheiten”: “Wer eine Handlung begeht, die geeignet ist, die Gefahr der Verbreitung einer übertragbaren Krankheit unter Menschen herbeizuführen, ist mit Freiheitsstrafe bis zu drei Jahren oder mit Geldstrafe bis zu 360 Tagessätzen zu bestrafen, wenn die Krankheit ihrer Art nach zu den wenn auch nur beschränkt anzeige- oder meldepflichtigen Krankheiten gehört”, heißt es im ersten Paragraph, im zweiten wird das Strafmaß bei Fahrlässigkeit auf ein Jahr Gefängnis reduziert.

Dabei handelt es sich um ein “potentielles Gefährdungsdelikt”: Das heißt, für eine Anklage reicht es, wenn theoretisch die Gefahr einer Ansteckung bestanden hätte. Eine tatsächliche Ansteckung oder sogar ein konkretes Risiko sind für die Anklage unerheblich.

Und dieser Paragraph wurde auch auf HIV-Positive angewandt. Allein von 2005 bis 2008 wurden in Österreich 18 Menschen mit HIV/Aids nach diesen Paragraphen angeklagt.

Doch damit soll jetzt Schluss sein: Das Justizministerium erkennt an, dass bei Safer Sex mit Positiven keine Gefährdung nach den Paragraphen 178 und 179 vorliegt. Und das betrifft nicht nur Sex mit Kondom. In einem Schreiben an die Österreichische Aids-Gesellschaft erläutert das Justizministerium, dass juristisch “selbst mit dem ungeschützten Geschlechtsverkehr einer HIV-infizierten Person dann keine Ansteckungsgefahr verbunden (ist), wenn sich die infizierte Person konsequent einer wirksamen antiretroviralen Therapie unterzieht”.

Die Österreichische Aids-Gesellschaft ist über die fortschrittlichen Ansichten des Justizministeriums erfreut und bezeichnet sie als “weiteren Schritt zur Entkriminalisierung und Entstigmatisierung von HIV-Positiven.”

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, Politics and Society, , , , ,

E-Health News: Strike threatens lives’ of AIDS patients

Source: http://www.health-e.org.za/news/article.php?uid=20032909

People taking life-long antiretroviral therapy have been left stranded and are being forced to skip crucial treatment as the public sector strike continues. Hospitals and clinics administering anti-retroviral and tuberculosis treatment have been empty this week, with doors being closed on patients needing the medication. Without this life-saving medication they could easily become sick again. A patient who did not want to be named told Health-e News Service that close to 60 patients on ARVs at the Koos Beukes clinic, in Soweto, were turned away earlier this week. She was among that group. “I was due to fetch my treatment. When I went there it was locked. How can they do that? The nurses always tell us that we should not skip our treatment, now they are the ones’ doing this to us, making us skip our medicine for two weeks. What do they expect us to do? They just want money and they don’t care about us, they need to help us”. The patient’s fear is almost palpable. “I feel very bad. I can’t live without my treatment. It will be a draw-back because it means that my CD4 count will reduce. Then, I’ll die. I don’t want to die. I want to continue living like I am”, she says. Two blood sisters also came for their treatment and could not find it. Luckily, they decided to go to the nearby Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital’s HIV/AIDS unit where they received help, said one of the sisters. “When we arrived, they told us that they are not working because they are afraid of being threatened by striking nurses since they had been intimidated the day before. They told us to go and didn’t even suggest an alternative place to go to. We decided to come here because without the tablets we won’t survive. A lot of people didn’t get their treatment because only the 3 of us came to Bara. I can only imagine what happened to the others”. The other sister was also relieved that they managed to get their ARV treatment, saying without them the chances of surviving become slim. “This is very hard because when you skip your treatment, even for one day, it becomes very tough. The experience we had there at the other clinic was not good, especially because no one even advised us of an alternative place. We rely on these pills”, she explained. ARV medication is a life-long intervention. A doctor from the Clinical HIV Research Unit at Helen Joseph Hospital says the effects of defaulting on treatment could be detrimental to ones’ life. Dr Francesca Conradie says the danger of skipping treatment may result in making medicines the patients are currently taking useless when they resume taking treatment. “Antiretroviral therapy reverses the damage done to the immune system. It is a very effective therapy. But because the virus mutates so quickly, you have to make sure that our patients don’t miss any tablets. One of the questions asked is: ‘Does a day or two make any difference’? It is very possible that it does. Once a person becomes resistant to a drug, you lose it. It cannot be used again. And if the virus starts to replicate, you lose that drug and the immune system damage can occur. The stakes are very high”. Conradie also expressed concern for pregnant women who have to protect their unborn babies from HIV infection. “The stakes are high for pregnant women because if their virus goes out of control they can transmit their virus to the baby, which is very difficult to treat. I’d say for both her and her unborn baby. We’ve got good medication in this country and an outstanding ARV programme… the biggest in the world…very successful…and we’re going to blow this all into the water by drug interruption”, she says. She has also warned that the strike may have crippling effects on TB patients who may develop drug-resistant tuberculosis if they default on treatment. “It consists of four 4 medicines for the first two months and two medicines for the next four months. If you don’t adhere to that, it’s possible that drug resistance will occur and we call those organisms multi-drug resistant TB. This is more expensive and the cure rate is poorer”.

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, HIV Prevention, HIV Treatment, Medical and Research, Politics and Society, Society and living environment, , , , ,

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