God, AIDS, Africa & HOPE

Reflections / Gedanken

HIV prevalence is going nowhere in South Africa

Results of the 20th antenatal surveillance survey, which were released this week, show that South Africa’s HIV epidemic is not gaining nor is it slowing down. But does this mean that the country’s efforts in combating HIV are paying off?
Every year over a period of one month, pregnant women between the ages of 15 – 49 attending selected public antenatal care clinics in the country’s 52 health districts take part in an anonymous HIV testing programme. This is for the annual antenatal HIV surveillance survey which helps the Health Department project the prevalence of the epidemic in the general population, so it can develop policy and plan interventions. The survey for 2009 involved 33 000 women and shows very little difference from the previous four years, during which prevalence has hovered around 29%.
“By 2009, we have got 29.4 percentage prevalence. From 2006, nothing is changing in terms of prevalence. Actually, it has flattened out”, said Health Minister Dr Aaron Motsoaledi, announcing the results at Birchwood hotel, near the Johannesburg International Airport.
“Why is it important?” , Motsoaledi asked. “By 1990, the prevalence was only 0.7% and it kept on going high and high until it reached a peak of 30 by 2003. From 2005 or so, it started getting flat. We don’t know for how long it will stay flat, but it’s like that. There’s no change in terms of the prevalence in the general population of antenatal women”, he said.
Although the epidemic seems to be stagnant, the survey shows a difference of HIV distribution among different age groups. At a high level of 21.7%, HIV prevalence among pregnant women between the ages of 15 – 24 is unchanged from the 2008 finding. However, infection is increasing among older women. HIV prevalence levels among the 15 – 24 year age group have to drop drastically in order to show that the country’s efforts are making a dent on HIV distribution. The level of prevalence in this age group is also a marker in the Millennium Development Goal specific to reducing HIV.
“Our MDG baseline is 21.7%. By 2015, this must go to 17.3%. This is the most important group to use to provide evidence when monitoring new HIV infections incidence. The 15 – 24 year olds is a very important group to us to tell us what’s happening. These are still very young (women) who are falling pregnant for the first time. These are new entrants and what is happening to them is a good reflection of showing the changes in terms of the prevalence”, the Health Minister said.
The only group where HIV prevalence is not stagnant is the 30 – 34 year age group. “It has increased to 41.5% in 2009. This age group, which is the hardest hit is moving from 39.6%, 40.4%”, he said. The World Health Organisation’s Dr Patrick Abok interprets the finding.  “We are seeing a lot of people now having access to treatment and care, which means that many people now are trying to know their status and be able to come early and have access to treatment and care. The other element is regarding the awareness… having people who know they are HIV-positive and knowing where to go and seek treatment, and in that way, it positively is affecting their lifestyle in terms of now trying to live longer. So, we are bound to see that number increasing simply because it means that the number of people who have access to treatment, very few of them will be dying. The longer they live that means the more people in that category, the more the prevalence”, said Dr Abok.
Deputy chair-person of the South African National AIDS Council (SANAC), Mark Heywood, described the results as being “fairly predictable”. Heywood said the report suggests that the country is not doing well to prevent new HIV infections. “We’re not getting on top of the HIV epidemic, at least, as far as prevention is concerned. It shows that there is still very high numbers of new HIV infections and it shows that we have a growing number of people living with HIV in this country because of the combination of new infections and people who are now living as a result of antiretroviral treatment. I wouldn’t say that it points to our failures, but it points to our short-comings and our inadequacies, and it tells the Department of Health and SANAC that they have to do more to get this thing right, and, actually, we’re not getting it right this moment in time”, Heywood said.
As usual, KwaZulu-Natal has the highest HIV prevalence, followed by Mpumalanga and the Free State. The lowest prevalence – below 20% – is in the Northern and Western Capes, while the North West, Gauteng, Limpopo and the Eastern Cape have a prevalence level of between 20 – 30%. Prevalence levels also vary within provinces, with certain districts ranking higher than others.
Source”
ihttp://www.health-e.org.za/news/article.php?uid=20033008

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

07.11.2010 AIDS Gala Berlin – and where is the bishop?

Again, I am guest at the German AIDS Gala in Berlin, the 17th of its kind. And again the German Oper Berlin is booked out and masses of people are flocking to attend this prestigious event. Michaela from Dresden is accompanying me to this event and after being picked up by the Shuttle Service at the hotel, it is once again a funny feeling to take the red carpet, letting the journalists and photographers guess who the couple is.. 🙂 Being asked how I felt about the feature of myself and HOPE Cape Town in the Berliner Morgenzeitung I must admit that I even didn’t know about it – nobody told me. Quick I realise that HOPE Cape Town will feature prominently this eve as one of the projects sponsored by the German AIDS Foundation. Brief chats with Her Highness, the Begum Aga Khan, the National foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle and his husband and others from the Board of Trustees follow before the programme starts. And as now expected, the chairperson of the board of trustees of the German AIDS Gala in Berlin, the Begum Aga Khan tells the audience about her visit at HOPE Cape Town last year – a film shows her and me visiting the Ithemba Ward and I wish all our HOPE Community Health Workers, senior staff and management could hear the applause as she congratulates the projects and the priest for their work down there in the Western Cape. These are moments were I would love to beam myself away for the time being – sometimes it is interesting enough for me difficult to hear public praise. But it is also the feeling of encouragement present.

The programme contains great opera – I do enjoy it and when the Opera Children’s choir sings “Laudate Domino” I suddenly realise that there is no official representative of the church. And if feels suddenly so completely wrong: National ministers, certainly all important people of the local and national business world, politicians and artists are present – showing their committment towards the battle against a pandemic which changed the world – celebrating also partly a project, which originated and is still support by a German-speaking Catholic community and no representative of my church is present. And I suddenly realise that also in Dresden the last five years there was no-show of the local bishop or his representative. The sorrows and the joy of the people are the sorrows and the joy of us Christians – I ask myself whether it is not poor judgement to be not present visible as a church at major events where people from so different walks of life unify and come together in this important cause. I suddenly feel sad a moment, but then the joy of the choir carries me away from it.

Congratulations to the German AIDS Foundation and all its helper for this great eve – and I am grateful that within one week I am able to attend to major fundraising galas bringing hope and future again to South Africa. A big part of the proceeds of Berlin are also going to HOPE Cape Town and supporting our work. Deo gratias.

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, HOPE Cape Town Association & Trust, Medical and Research, Networking, Reflection, Society and living environment, , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

20.10.2010 Podium Discussion

Yesterday evening at the Centre of the Book: Podiums discussion about ” A new South African HIV/AIDS policy: Reason for HOPE?.

Nozizwe Madlala-Routledge, Deputy Minister of Defence (1999-2004) and Deputy Minister of Health (2004-2007) and Chris Bateman,  Senior Editor of the SA Journal of Medicine and myself are discussing the new policy and the role, politics and civil society must play so that the new HIV/AIDS policy becomes reality. An interesting debate about the possibilities and limitations of the New South Africa and its leaders, but also the misery and burden of ordinary South Africans. The questions of the audience give room for a brought debate from trips to the bilateral German – South African agreement versus a contribution to the Global AIDS Fund, but also practical question how hope can be brought to certain communities and a perspective on life worth living and striving for.

An interesting evening where also the president’s life and the topic “leading by example” was not spared some honest comments. Last but not least the question why South Africa pays 20% above the cheapest market price for ART medication produced by Aspen and all the red tape stopping to make cheaper and more meaningful solutions possible.

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

Epistle 2010-25…

…. and it reads: “Father Roland P.  died this afternoon at 3h45 at the Durbanville Medi-Clinic. His requiem Mass will be celebrated at….”

Pictures surface in my mind: the small talk with him during the opening of the Bavarian House during the soccer world cup. His smile which made you think twice whether he was serious or joking, a brilliant mind.. and.. and .. and.

A life is gone, a life came to an end and sitting in the evening in a restaurant with a friend having dinner, the question arose: Is that all what is left from him? Memories? Memories in those who have known him and which will definitely fade away in the then following generation…
A life is gone, a whole world is gone, because Roland was, like everybody else, unique: The way he experienced things will be gone for ever, and with it, everything he experienced: the first rain, the first steps, the first love, the way he worked as a priest and so much more. Gone for ever or taken up into heaven? What kind of heaven? Heaven with eternal praise or eternal love? Should not a priest know this best?

Not sure, but sure I feel somehow somber in this moment and my thoughts are with his family and with himself. It is like his death is touching my life for a while, slowing it down, commemorating it, and also questioning everything what I am doing and how I am living.

Yes, what is the meaning of life? Where do we come from, where do we go to? Philosophical question and very theoretical normally they are suddenly so vivid and alive. But is it really important to know where we will go when we die?  Not even sure about this – but what I know very much so: That I have to live my life as long as I can, that I have only one chance in life to live it to the fullest. And surely: That I don’t know when I will be called to higher services, it has an urgency to live, and to live it as complete and fulfilling as one can. And that means also to accept all grey shadows of life.
I said Mass this evening in Belhar for him and I am grateful for all the  moments, we shared when our ways crossed in the last years.  RIP we Christian say, but I would love to change it: Live in peace where ever you are now and thanks for being a reminder even in your death, how valuable my own lifetime is. I knew it, I know it, but still I need a reminder from time to time.

Filed under: General, Reflection, Uncategorized, , , ,

…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, , , , , ,

Blog Categories

Follow God, AIDS, Africa & HOPE on WordPress.com

You can share this blog in many ways..

Bookmark and Share

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 2,711 other subscribers

Translation – Deutsch? Française? Espanol? …

The translation button is located on each single blog page, Copy the text, click the button and paste it for instant translation:
Website Translation Widget

or for the translation of the front page:

* Click for Translation

Copyright

© Rev Fr Stefan Hippler and HIV, AIDS and HOPE.
Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Rev Fr Stefan Hippler and HIV, AIDS and HOPE with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

This not withstanding the following applies:
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.