God, AIDS, Africa & HOPE

Reflections / Gedanken

POZ Magazine: Evaluating HIV Risk of Male Sex Workers in Africa

New research is illuminating the activities and risks of male sex workers in southern Africa, PlusNews reports. Researchers at the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and South Africa’s Sex Workers Education and Advocacy Taskforce (SWEAT) interviewed 70 male sex workers in Kenya, Namibia, South Africa, Uganda and Zimbabwe. The interviewees reported that unprotected sex was common in their profession for a number of reasons, including the unavailability of condom-compatible water-based lubricants, higher fees for unprotected sex, physically abusive clients, and alcohol and drug abuse. Those who visited hospitals and clinics for HIV testing and treatment also reported being mocked and publicly stigmatized by health workers.

Source:   http://www.poz.com/rssredir/articles/Africa_Male_SexWorkers_1_20660.shtml

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, HIV Prevention, Politics and Society, Reflection, Society and living environment, , , , ,

Explizit net

I am a preacher since many years, but since quite a time, I am asked to put things into writing – culminating in the book “Gott-AIDS-Afrika” 2007 with the journalist Bartholomaeus Grill. And I discovered that writing also can be powerful – equally not easy like preaching. One has to prepare, to think through, to be able to tell a story, to catch an audience – and sometimes simply deliver some facts or comment on a development in a meaningful and fair way. A couple of weeks ago I was asked whether I could contribute on a permanent base towards “explizit.net”, which tries to bring as a Catholic Internet portal a variety of news to its readers. All more than just plain news, rather some insight into happenings in church, religion, politics and society.
i agreed and try now in my way to contribute that German-speaking people can understand more the happenings of Africa, with a fous of Southern Africa. And I discovered that writing also helps me to look more in-depth, to think more about events, to investigate further and so to come myself to a deeper understanding of the matters.
So far, I looked into the AIDS conference in New York, wrote about the Libya crisis and the response of the AU and reflected on South Africa’s draft secrecy bill. A piece on the re-election of Julius Malema is in the making and might be online the time this blog is also online. And not to forget HOPE & JOY, the initiative of the Jesuit institute close to Johannesburg honouring the 50th anniversary of the proclamation of the 2nd Vatican Council.

And I discovered interesting reading from others contributing to the website. Much better reading then I am used to from some of the other so-called Catholic websites,which are mainly acting as the defender of a long-lost faith construction. So, well, if you are in for it: http://www.explizit.net – worth registering 🙂

Filed under: Networking, Reflection, Society and living environment, Uncategorized, , , , , , , ,

Welcome in Manenberg

This afternoon the World AIDS Awareness Expedition was due to have a reception in Manenberg after a Round Table at the German Consulate General. Unfortunately the team did not make it yet till Cape Town, still stuck somewhere between Kinshasa and the border to Angola – so the latest news. The kids of the Amy Biehl Foundation – RC Church afterschool care had prepared for this big event and so the organizers of HOPE Cape Town had decided to go ahead with the programme. Instead of the team it was my task to take the kids to follow the route of the expedition so far and to tell them about my experience with the almost 5 weeks, I joined the team in the Americas. Photos and video clips made the talk an easy to follow one and it was great to see those present feel to be part of a bigger picture, of a closer coming world, of a global village we often forget to realize in all the dramas of daily struggle.
Three team members, awaiting news from the team and supposed to join in Cape Town, almost the whole board of the HOPE Cape Town Association, HOPE Community Health Workers joined the parishioners and kids as well as Fr Wim. For me it was great to see how kids have learned on their instruments since beginning of the year. And the hiphop dancers were really marvellous. Not to forget the catering, so that nobody had to go home hungry. I guess we went home all with the feeling that ‘move the world” also takes place in Manenberg, thanks to many who assist within and outside the community.

Yesterday evening I gave a talk for students of the Duke University at the Mediterranean Villa – interesting to engage with young adults from the US, especially as two of the students are volunteer at our organisation. Once again worlds came together which are normally far away. Also that moves the world in many ways.
So as I write this blog entry, I am deeply moved by what I have seen, heard and encountered the last 24 hours. It is indeed a blessing to be part of bringing worlds together and maybe assist, together with others, to make the world a better place.

And for the expedition we all hope that they find a good way to continue they trip and their very important mission for the world.

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, HOPE Cape Town Association & Trust, Networking, , , , , , , , , ,

HIV – a 30th birthday

Normally, one celebrates a birthday or an anniversary, but celebrating HIV? First: the virus is surely older than 30 but we can say that 30 years ago HIV turned into the limelight of public interest. Who does not remember the scare, this unknown, but clear gay disease – so much so, that the responsible health authorities ignored early warning signs that there might be more to it and allowed for a long time that untested blood was used for transfusions. In respective it showed so clearly that finding a minority to blame is the easiest and one keeps on blaming until disaster struck again and one has to admit that the problem is broader than said. Whether Ronald Reagan or Nelson Mandela – both did not a lot to face the pandemic and let’s be honest, an earlier political approach worldwide or in South Africa would have saved many lives. This is not meant to blame those in power, but it shows how ignorance or tradition or religious feelings can become source of a killing spree.The difference between the two is that Ronald Reagan never apologised for his shortcomings in this matter while Nelson Mandela acknowledged that he could have done more. Then the President’s Fund (PEPFAR) comes to mind, which ignored condoms (as the RC church still tries to do) and prostitution. Once again how many lives could have been saved? And now, 30 years into the pandemic, once again all those important world leaders face another decision: to keep the money flow going for the next years to turn the tight knowing that this is possible or otherwise ignoring the facts and or handing out empty promises with the result that the pandemic will take the next turn rising again.
But 30 years of HIV is also a day of thanksgiving: to all the sung and unsung heroes who fought the pandemic, all the researchers and doctors who dedicated their lives to get tests and medication out to those infected and affected. And praise to all the gay organisations worldwide which were indeed the first promoting safer sex and bringing the pandemic into the light of the public. 30 years of HIV is therefore also a salute to all those around the world who are looking, caring for the 34 million HIV positive people. And as a priest I am proud to say that specially the churches are doing their utmost in the fields of care and treatment for people living with or affected by the virus.

30 years – and still a lot to do: to find a cure, to abolish stigma,  to allow that human rights and dignity are guaranteed for people living with the virus. And of course also to reflect on sexuality and death again, to ask all these practical and philosophical questions about our life, our longings, our fears and our hopes. And this is something I strongly believe is also true: the treat of HIV or the infection was for many people also a chance to hold in, to reflect and to become a more conscious person – knowing how valued life is and how much everybody has to take care to live it to the fullest.

So for me personally HIV has many facets – it has certainly changed my life in many ways: the way I work as a priest, the way I live as a person, the way I see life, the gratefulness I feel about every new day and new challenge. It has brought me to know great people and great friends and to work in one of the most beautiful cities in the world. It also has brought me in conflicts with my church and certainly there is an ongoing debate about prevention and certain aspects of moral theology – but at the same time it has forced me to think sharp and to listen to arguments carefully.

And it has certainly done one thing: it has taken away a lot of my fears – having seen people dying with full-blown AIDS, having done so much counseling, having faced my own anxiety while watching dead and dying, despair and hopelessness, having allowed many people to judge me in one or the other way, I know more than ever who I am and what I want to do with my life: to live it to the fullest the way I was created and called by God. And to assist others to do the same with their lives.

 

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, HIV Prevention, Networking, Reflection, Society and living environment, Uncategorized, , , , , , , ,

UNAIDS: Treat 15 million by 2015

by Keith Alcorn (published: 06 June 2011 copyright UNAIDS)

Global funding for AIDS needs to increase by one-third in the short term and by 20% in the longer term in order to achieve a radical reduction in new infections within a  decade, according to projections issued on June 3rd by UNAIDS. UNAIDS executive director Michel Sidibé told reporters ahead of this week’s UN General Assembly Special Session on AIDS, that UNAIDS was pushing world leaders to commit to a target of treating 15 million people by 2015, and to a major increase in funding in order to decisively alter the course of the epidemic over the next decade. The agency also reported that 6.6 million people worldwide are receiving antiretroviral treatment, with 1.4 million people starting treatment in 2010 alone.  UNAIDS estimates that 34 million people are living with HIV worldwide. According to the AIDS at 30 report, the global rate of new HIV infections declined by nearly 25% between 2001 and 2009. In India, the rate of new HIV infections fell by more than 50% and in South Africa by more than 35%; both countries have the largest number of people living with HIV on their continents.

However UNAIDS also reported that funding for HIV prevention, treatment and care fell for the first time in 2010.

“I am worried that international investments are falling at a time when the AIDS response is delivering results for people,” said Mr Sidibé. “If we do not invest now, we will have to pay several times more in the future.” A highly detailed modelling exercise led by the World Health Organization suggests that an increase in funding of one-third between now and 2015, coupled with a much tougher approach to funding only what is known to work, could avert 12.2 million new HIV infections over the next decade. What UNAIDS and WHO call an investment framework is led by the principles of `know your epidemic and know your response`, and seeks to channel funds in a much more rigorous way towards interventions that are known to work, and towards populations at greatest risk of infection. The modelling work found that the most targeted approaches were likely to have biggest impact on new infections. For example, a comparison of a `broad and shallow` or a `narrow and deep` programme in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, found that achieving 80% coverage of antiretroviral therapy and circumcision of 70% of uncircumcised men had a substantially greater effect on HIV incidence over ten years than a wider programme that also sought to increase condom use, counsel individuals on risk reduction and promote microbicide use in women, all at low levels. The `broad and shallow` approach assumed much lower levels of treatment access and circumcision. The impact of a `narrow and deep` approach was even more profound in Karachi, Pakistan, where a highly targeted approach that focussed on 80% treatment coverage and 80% access to needle exchange and opioid substitution had a much greater impact on new infections than a broad approach which delivered lower levels of treatment and harm reduction alongside behaviour change interventions. The `narrow but deep` approach might reduce new infections in Karachi by over 80% within six years, the modelling exercise concluded. However, the researchers are not advocating that all countries follow this approach; the allocation of resources is highly dependent on the epidemiological context. The model estimated resource needs for 139 countries based on epidemiological data and information on current coverage of prevention, treatment and care.

The model showed that if applied across all countries, global resource needs would rise from the current need of $16 billion per year to peak at $22 billion in 2015, before beginning to fall back gradually as a result of economies of scale and a decline in new infections. Requirements for the core programme activities – treatment and care, condoms promotion and distribution, prevention of mother to child transmission, male circumcision and behaviour change programmes – rises from $7 million in 2011 to $12.9 billion in 2015 and then falls back to $10.6 billion in 2020. This costing assumes that 13.1 million of the 18.3 million people eligible for treatment will be receiving it by 2015, and 18.7 million by 2020. Expanding treatment to provide antiretrovirals to all HIV-discordant couples where the partner with HIV has a CD4 count between 350 and 550 – the group studied in the recently announced HPTN 052 study – would increase the number in need of treatment by 1 million in 2015, and would add $500 million to the cost of the framework package by 2015.

New infections are predicted to decline from about 2.4 million in 2011 to 1 million in 2015 and 870,000 a year in 2020. The new framework could avert 12.2 million new infections between 2011 and 2020, including 1.9 million in infants. In addition, expansion of treatment would avert 7.4 million deaths over the same period. Treatment for HIV-discordant couples above the currently recommended threshold for starting treatment would avert an estimated 340,000 infections. The researchers estimate that the cost per-life year gained of the interventions in the framework is $1060, making it affordable for even the poorest countries. Any health intervention which costs less than the GDP per capita of a country is judged highly cost-effective by the World Health Organization. The massive expansion in treatment numbers would be facilitated by community mobilisation and by large reductions in the cost of drugs and treatment delivery, the authors say. In particular the model assumes that previous cost reduction trends will continue, allowing a 65% reduction in the cost of treatment between 2011 and 2020. A shift towards delivery of antiretroviral treatment through primary care and community-based care will be critical in achieving the cost reduction. But reluctance is being expressed by the governments of wealthy country governments to sign up to new targets for treatment expansion at this week’s UNGASS meeting. Furthermore, activists monitoring the negotations on a final declaration say that wealthy countries are also trying to water down any commitment to improve access to medicines in the final statement. “We are seeing an unusual position being taken by the EU which is refusing to commit to any treatment targets and at the same time is working with the US to remove or significantly dilute any language in the text related to increasing access to safe, effective and affordable generic medicines,” said Matthew Kavanagh of Health GAP (Global Access Project).

Language proposed by the nations facilitating the UN process, Botswana and Australia, on trade agreements and the removal of any and all TRIPS-plus measures from free trade agreements has been rejected by the EU. They are joined in this by the United States and Japan. TRIPS-plus measures seek to enforce higher standards of intellectual property protection on developing countries as the price of access to the markets of the wealthiest nations. These measures may undermine opportunities to use TRIPS flexibilities that allow low and middle-income countries to manufacture and / or export antiretroviral drugs that are still patented in wealthy countries. These measures may stand in the way of manufacturing new antiretroviral combinations that are cheap, less toxic and less prone to drug resistance, and may also choke off the supply of cheap drugs for second-line antiretroviral treatment in those whose first drug combination has failed to control HIV.

Reference

Schwartlander B et al, on behalf of the Investment Framework Study Group. Towards an improved investment approach for an effective response to HIV/AIDS. The Lancet, advance online publication, June 3, 2011. (View full text article here).

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

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