Tag: HIV

  • NGO raises HIV alarm in Enugu

    A non-governmental organisation, Civil Society for HIV/AIDS in Nigeria (CiSHAN), Enugu State Chapter has alerted the people and government of the state on the apparent increase of HIV infection in the state.

    According to the organisation, more funds ought to be budgeted for HIV/AIDS related cases in the state to rid it of the scourge.

    The Enugu State coordinator of CiSHAN, Mrs. B.C Nwibechukwu who disclosed this in an address when the organisation paid a working visit to the Speaker of Enugu State House of Assembly, Hon. Edward Ubosi lamented that infection occur among the low risk heterosexual group which includes people who are in marital or cohabiting relationship.

    “The state HIV prevalence shows that the rate of infection is on the increase (rise) and presently far above the national and zonal average,” Nwibechukwu laments.

    Nwibechukwu pointed out that 1986 survey report showed that Enugu State had high prevalence of above 6.5% which was the highiest then in the country but with time, the rate came down but is now surprised that it has begun to rise again.

    She explained the source of her fears.  “Recent studies and surveys carried out reveals new infection trends coming from the hitherto low risk segment of the population that were not targeted for preventive services.”

    Mother-to-child transmission of HIV constitutes a huge public health concern globally and especially in resource-poor countries.”

    The coordinator who said they used the visit to intimate the Speaker on the forthcoming launching of their maiden Strategic Plan document in November, expressed worry that if nothing was done fast, Enugu State might be in serious danger in future because some donor agencies would soon stop their financial intervention.

    “Honourable speaker sir, we are worried and concerned on the ability of the state to sustain the gains made in the areas of HIV & AIDS prevention, treatment, care, and support.

    “Our worry is worsened by the continuous donor fatigue and also due to the fact that most donors would be closing shops towards the fall of 2015.  What this portends is that if no proactive measure is taken to sustain the gains and improve on it, we may find ourselves in a state worse than we where some few years back.

    To help reduce the rising rate of the pandemic, Nwibechukwu urged the Speaker to use his good offices to see that a bill is sponsored to dedicate funds in the Enugu State annual budget for CiSHAN for ownership and sustainability of HIV/AIDS response.

     

  • NGO screens 1,017 Bayelsa residents for HIV

    NO curtail the spread of HIV, an NGO, Mercy-Seat Holistic Development Organisation, has carried out free HIV screening of 1,017 residents of Bayelsa State.

    The NGO’s Chief Executive Officer, Mr Torukuru Adakien, made the disclosure to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) last Monday in Yenagoa.

    Adakien said the HIV Counselling and Testing (HCT) were aimed at educating the people on the truths and facts about HIV.

    “We conducted this programme to support campaigns against HIV/AIDS, especially in Bayelsa; there is need for us in the society to know our HIV status.

    “During the programme which ended on Sept. 30, we had free HCT Uptake of 1,017 persons in the period; we started by advocacy visits to Motor Parks and Mechanics Villages/Shops.

    “The advocacy visit was done in the three Senatorial District of Bayelsa; we also distributed free condom of over 800 packets to the people.

    “This programme was in collaboration with the Federal Ministry of Youth Development,’’ he told NAN praising the government for supporting the course.

    “We understand that HIV is one of the dreaded diseases all over the world, but I believe we can tackle the disease if we can come together to support the campaign.’’

    Adakien said that sex has been established to be the common means of spreading the disease and urged those who could not do without sex to always wear condom for protection.

    “You can also avoid contacting HIV by abstaining from unprotected sex, sharing sharp objects like razor blade, hair clipper among others,’’ Adakien said.

    He said that the outcome of the screening would be discussed with the concerned individuals.

     

  • LSACA takes HIV campaign to communities

    The Lagos State AIDS Control Agency (LSACA), in collaboration with Community AIDS Development Foundation (CADEF), Rock Care Initiative and People Against HIV/AIDS in the Barrack (PAHAB), has begun free HIV counselling and testing in some communities in the state.

    They are Shibiri, Iyana Era/Tipper Garage, Gojere, opposite Ojo Barrack, Igbo Elerin First Gate, Onireke in Ojo and Amuwo-Odofin Local Government Council Area (LCDA).

    The programme, the Acting Chief Executive Officer, LSACA, Dr Olusegun Ogboye, said is aimed at taking HIV campaign to door-steps.

    He underscored the importance of people knowing their status, stressing that most residents preferred to be attended to in their immediate environment instead of travelling some kilometres before getting the service.

    LSACA in collaboration with the Civil Society Organisations (CSO) decided to provide services in those communities before moving to others, he said.

    Ogboye said awareness and response to reduce HIV prevalence is key to the state’s strategic plan, and as such, every hand must be on deck to get to zero prevalence.

    He said the state has inaugurated the State Technical Team on mapping of Most At Risk Populations (MARPs) of people.

    The MARPs, he noted, included female sex workers (FSW), injecting drug users (IDU) and men having sex with men (MSM) .

    The team, he said, would identify the locations where people inject drugs and men have sex with men. “They would be counselled and tested. There would be moonlight testing for female sex workers too,” he said.

    The agency, he said, was conducting interviews for research assistants, data clerks and supervisors for local epidemic appraisal (LEA) study, adding that this was done being in partnership with the Society for Family Health (SFH) to scale up HIV prevention in the state.

    LSACA would take the HIV campaign to difficult areas, Ogboye said.

  • ‘LSACA is increasing HIV testing, counselling’

    The Lagos State AIDS Control Agency (LSACA) has scaled up HIV counseling and testing in the state.

    Its Acting Chief Executive Officer, Dr Olusegun Ogboye said his agency had a meeting with the technical work group and Inter Local Action Committee on AIDS (ILACA) to re-strategise on how to make people know their status.

    Ogboye, who underscored the importance of the meeting as a pivot to increasing HIV counseling and testing in Lagos State, said LSACA has conducted outreach programmes in Oshodi and Ejigbo Local Government Areas.

    This, he said, was done in partnership with the National Action Committee on AIDS (NACA) SURE-P Project.

    The agency, he said, also participated in NACA organised stakeholders’ meeting to engage private facilities to scale up the Prevention of Mother to Child Transmission (PMTCT).

    He enjoined workers to know their status by going for HIV Counseling and testing because a healthy workforce will increase the productivity of the state.

    The CEO said HIV positive people could be symptom free for 10 years, and as such, infect other people if not checked and treated.

    This, he said, was the reason behind his agency’s meeting with the technical work group (TWG) and advisory and implementation team.

    The outbreak of Ebola Virus Disease (EVD), he said, affected the publicity and enlightenment campaign on HIV/AIDS prevention, hence the need to scale up HIV counseling and testing (HCT).

  • How to cope with ailment at old age

    How to cope with ailment at old age

    Ruth Waryaro was 50 in 2003 when she discovered she had contracted HIV and AIDS. In spite of the emotional and psychological devastation in her life, Ruth took the courage to discover herself; and take care of her four children and three grandchildren.

    18 years on, Ruth is now an advocate and challenges self-stigma that she says is prevalent among the older persons who live with the HIV and AIDS.

    “From my 18 years experience of living and ageing with HIV, I can hereby attest that the epidemic is no longer a problem of the younger people,” she says.

    Speaking in Nairobi ahead of her travel to South Africa to attend the second World Congress on Health Ageing courtesy of HelpAge International where she was to deliver a speech, Ruth says similar to many other African countries, the impact of HIV and AIDS to old people is becoming an area of increasing concern.

    “We older people need to do away with self-stigma and teach the younger people how to prevent it. Older persons living with HIV need to be accepting the reality that stigma starts with the person infected. If you don’t stigmatize yourself, no one will. Prevention, she says, starts with the person.

    “Older persons should go for testing and counseling, so that when they are talking to their children, they know and have the courage of what they are talking about,” says Ruth.

    Reflecting on her personal life, Ruth says one does not need to be promiscuous to contract the virus that leads to AIDS. It could come from an error by one’s partner, in her case, HIV entered her family through her husband who then worked in Lesotho.

    “A week after testing, I sat down with my husband and told him about my status. He got up and went away without uttering a word and we have never lived with together since then,” she says.

    According to Ruth, acquiring HIV is bad enough, but is worse for someone who is a woman who is aging and living with HIV. “They are the section of Kenyan population subjected to worst forms of discrimination,” she says.

    We are often discriminated by family, community, society and government. For example, cash transfer programmes do not reach everybody yet most of those left out cannot afford going to clinics and eating properly and yet many have lost their physical strength and ability to care for their dependants. Even for those older persons receiving the cash, it doesn’t seem to be enough. The amounts should be raised.

    Her husband’s behavior attests to what holds within research studies.

    According to a number of researches, African men tend to think that HIV is for a woman only which has been reinforced by the Joint UN Agency for AIDS (UNAIDS) reports that tell of feminization of HIV.

    Sub-Saharan Africa has the most serious HIV and AIDS epidemic in the world. In 2012, roughly 25 million people were living with HIV, accounting for nearly 70 percent of the global. But HIV statistics from the region also show an epidemic that has disproportionately affected women, often as a result of social and economic inequality.

    A UNAIDS report in 2012 showed that six in ten of all people living with HIV in the region were female.

    The highest HIV prevalence rates among women occur in southern Africa, particularly in South Africa, Botswana, Lesotho and Swaziland. Women and girls often face discrimination in terms of access to education, employment and healthcare. In this region, men often dominate sexual relationships. As a result, women cannot always practice safer sex even when they know the risks that are involved. Gender-based violence has been identified as a key driver of HIV transmission in the region.

    Against this background, Ruth urges older women should encourage their husbands to use condoms and learn more about HIV and AIDS.

    A nurse by profession and whose career has spanned 40 years working in Kenya, Uganda and the UK, Ruth says as people get old with HIV, their immune system considerably slows down unlike the immune system for people growing old without HIV.

    For this reason, she advocates for such older persons to eat balanced diet and keep on testing for other non-communicable diseases like diabetes and hypertension, which are also common among older persons. “We also need to exercise a lot to keep fit,” she says.

    A rights defender, Ruth also urges older persons to demand prompt medical people to test them for HIV since they won’t do so out of baseless assumptions and prejudice against ageing.

    According to Dr Prafulla Mishra, Regional Director, HelpAge International, East, West and Central Africa, it is generally assumed that older persons cannot acquire HIV based on the wrong assumptions that they are not sexually active.

    Worse still, a recent study by the HelpAge International and its network partners in four countries of Africa, namely, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and South Africa showed that there are few medical personnel who specialize on diseases of the older persons (geriatrics training) leave alone the knowledge of handling ageing and HIV.

    Yet, according to Ruth, nothing can be far from truth. “It is a fact that even older men have multiple sex partners and are shy and/or do not know how to use condoms. Just because HIV is mainly through sex, older people don’t want to be known that they still have sex. Many older women whose husbands passed away do not know what they died from and further more they don’t want to go for testing with the false believes that it has been a while since their spouses passed on,” she says.

    Thus, adds Ruth, older persons should have an impetus to make sure that they leave nothing to chance. “Older persons need to go to counseling and testing centers and ask to be tested,” she says.

    Ruth is now involved in advocating for all types of training and/or teaching on HIV and AIDS management to include older people for it to be effective. “Living out old people is doing half the job and will never meet zero infections as beign advocated for,” she says.

    Ruth pleaded with the government and development partners to priorities on ageing and HIV as an urgent matter.

    She says that the population of older persons living with HIV might look insignificant compared with other vulnerable and at risk populations, but the reality is, she says that any unknown and uncontrolled virus is disastrous towards zero infection.

    “Older People must no longer be marginalized in national and international HIV and AIDS policies and programmes. Our numbers and status qualify that any society and government to consider the health rights of older people to be human rights,” says Ruth.

  • Judge to soldier: You’re shameless for sleeping with mother, daughter

    Judge to soldier: You’re shameless for sleeping with mother, daughter

    An Ogun State High Court sitting in Abeokuta, on Thursday chastised a retired soldier, Alabi Ibrahim for habitually sleeping with mother and daughter, saying he is “shameless” and undeserving of membership of the society.

    The court which described Alabi’s conduct as an “abomination,” sentenced him to life imprisonment not only for defiling his10-year-old stepdaughter, but also for infecting her with Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV).

    Alabi was said to have committed the crime in 2012 in his Abeokuta home where both the little girl  and her mother reside.

    The sexual assault on the girl drew the attention of the Ogun State Chapter of the Child Protection Network (CPN), a Non-Governmental Organisations that fights for children’s rights which pushed for the arrest and prosecution of the suspect.

    A medical report from the Federal Medical Centre (FMC), Abeokuta, and tendered in court during trial by Dr Seyi Adejobi, indicated that the convict had sexually assaulted the girl and also infected her with HIV while the convict’s blood sample also tested positive to HIV.

    The girl in her oral evidence told the court that the assault was routine and had since lost count of number of times she was raped by her step – father.

    According to the girl, she was always threatened with death by the convict if she ever told anybody about it.

    The convict’s Counsel, Adebola Okudoro, in pleading for clemency for his client, argued that the allegation was hearsay, and appealed to the court to temper justice with mercy.

    Okudoro said: “the accused person is a first offender. The health of the accused should be put into consideration. He is infected with HIV, and will need access to medical attention, which is very expensive, and there are no such facilities in prisons custody.

    “The accused person is the breadwinner of the family. He has several dependants. We pray the court to temper justice with mercy.”

    But delivering his judgement, Justice Abiodun Akinyemi held that the victim’s testimony during cross examination and the medical report have convinced the court that the accused defiled the girl and also infected her.

    Akinyemi added that the convict’s action has brought a permanent stigma on the innocent girl while medical report does not suggest that the girl had earlier been sexually assaulted as been made to believe by the convict.

    “I am fully convinced that the accused had repeatedly had sex with the girl. I found the accused guilty as charged. I find it not in my mind to show any mercy.

    “The man is shameless, sleeping with mother and child, what an abomination. People like him need not to be in the society. I therefore sentenced him to life imprisonment, he should however be given access to reasonable treatment,” Justice Akinyemi held.

     

  • NACA, UNAIDS, UNICEF hold workshop on HIV sensitisation

    NACA, UNAIDS, UNICEF hold workshop on HIV sensitisation

    Over twenty medical doctors from a range of specialisations have gathered in Abuja to take part in a sensitisation workshop on the UNAIDS treatment target – the 90-90-90.

    The doctors from the Nigerian Medical Association and the Association of Resident Doctors will listen to presentations by facilitators from UNAIDS and UNICEF on the ambitious treatment target and share their views on how best to fast-track and achieve it by 2020.

    The workshop organised by UNAIDS and the National Agency for the Control of AIDS (NACA) is meant to sensitise participants on the treatment target which aims at ensuring that, by the year 2020, 90 per cent of all people living with HIV will know their HIV status.

    It is also meant to ensure that 90 per cent of all people with diagnosed HIV infection will receive sustained antiretroviral therapy while 90 per cent of all people receiving antiretroviral therapy will have viral load suppression.

    “Unless medical practitioners are fully engaged and take ownership of the 90-90-90 target, it will be difficult to attain. They need to be in the driver’s seat for this process of testing, treating and retaining people on treatment to happen. When health care providers own the target, its success will be guaranteed in Nigeria,” said Dr Bilali Camara, UNAIDS Country Director for Nigeria and UNAIDS Focal Point for Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).

    The 90-90-90 treatment target was launched at a high-level political session of the 20th International AIDS Conference held in July 2014 in Melbourne, Australia, when the UNAIDS Executive Director, Michel Sidibé, called for a new set of treatment targets by 2020.

    This is the third workshop of its kind in Nigeria. A similar workshop involving vulnerable women and girls took place in March this year, followed by another held in the month of May for journalists and people living with HIV.

    NACA, UNAIDS and UNICEF will facilitate this workshop.

  • 5 children die every minute in Africa – WHO

    5 children die every minute in Africa – WHO

    In 2013, an estimated 6.3 million children under five died, 2.9 million of them in the WHO African region. This is equivalent to five children under 5 years of age dying every minute. Two thirds of these deaths can be attributed to preventable causes. A third of all these deaths are in the neonatal period.

    Pneumonia, diarrhoea, malaria and HIV are the main causes of death in infants and young children. In the African Region, about 473 000 children die from pneumonia, 300 000 from diarrhoea, and a further 443 000 from malaria every year. In 2012, 230 000 new HIV infections were recorded among children under 5 years of age.

    “Although tremendous progress has been made in identifying and treating infants and children with HIV, much remains to be done to scale-up and sustain effective prevention, care and treatment, especially of pneumonia and diarrhoea,” said Dr Matshidiso Moeti, WHO Regional Director for Africa.

    Pneumonia is the single biggest killer of children worldwide, accounting for nearly one in seven deaths among young children, with an estimated over 950 000 deaths annually. Most of the deaths occur in resource-constrained countries, with 50% in sub-Saharan Africa.

    Globally, diarrhoeal diseases account for nearly one out of every six deaths in children under 5 years of age, equivalent to over 578 000 deaths per year. Diarrhoeal disease occurs more commonly in HIV-infected people, with worse outcomes than in uninfected children.

    Persistent diarrhoea in particular is associated with a high risk of death in HIV-infected children. Administration of oral rehydration and zinc in combination with antiretroviral therapy (ART) and restoring immune function are critical for the treatment of diarrhoea in children with HIV.

    “Undernutrition is another critical risk factor in most countries in the African Region, and nutrition and food security remains a fundamental challenge to child survival. Breastfeeding is one of the best ways to provide newborns, infants and young children with the nutrients that they need while protecting them against conditions like pneumonia, diarrhea and undernutrition,” Dr Moeti added.

    The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends that exclusive breastfeeding starts within one hour after birth and lasts until a baby is six months old. Continued breastfeeding and appropriate complementary foods should be made available for up to 2 years of age and beyond.

    In mid-2013, WHO issued new guidelines for breastfeeding and the prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT) of HIV. These recommendations were intended for use in resource-poor settings in low-and middle-income countries.

    One of the recommendations for PMTCT is to promote the use of ART in all pregnant and breastfeeding women. These recommendations also include providing ART – irrespective of one’s CD4 count – to all children under 5 years of age with HIV, all pregnant, and all breastfeeding women with HIV including their infants until they cease to breastfeed.

    Health systems in Africa are often not able to adequately address the severe burden of childhood disease. Low total health expenditure with high out of pocket health costs hamper progress in child survival. Hence just as health can drive economic growth, ill-health can push people into poverty and make it very difficult for them to escape the vicious cycle of poverty and disease.

    WHO said it will continue to work with governments and partners to strengthen health systems to reduce unacceptably high infant and child deaths in the African Region.

  • Group urges review of HIV treatment for students

    THE Programme Manager for Positive Action for Treatment Access (PATA), Francis Umoh, has called for the decentralisation of the voluntary and counselling centres (VCT) to rural areas.

    He said the measure would help increase awareness and access to treatment of HIV and AIDS in rural areas where incidence of infection is often high.

    Umoh made this known at a health seminar and free medical fair organised by E-Hon for Yealth Initiative (EHI), sub-project of the Carrington Youth Fellowship Initiative (CYFI), an Initiative established by the United States Consulate, Lagos for over 500 pupils drawn from across three education districts in Lagos.

    The programme featured talks on drug abuse, HIV and AIDS awareness, free medical test, counselling session, as well as distribution of educational materials.  Umoh noted that despite comprehensive care services for HIV and AIDS patients in secondary and tertiary hospitals, promoting VCT at the primary health care centre is the entry point for the reduction of HIV and AIDS infection.

    “The first port of call is to promote VCT for HIV patients in primary health care centre because it is the first call of entry of HIV infection and we have to reach the youth wherever they are,” he said.

    He cited a recent research conducted by PATA in collaboration with the Lagos State Ministry of Health and UNICEF that shows that many HIV positive secondary school pupils are dropping out of the treatment circle because of the challenge of transportation and the structure created around the VCT that is not friendly to them.

    Team leader of the fair, Kikilope Olarore said the project was established to provide an interactive e-health information dissemination platform that will enlighten and engage at least 5,000 adolescents in Lagos on adolescent-relevant healthcare issues through SMS, social media, radio drama and a medical fair.

    She said that the project, which started officially with support and authorization from the Lagos State Ministry of Education in July 2014, is currently engaging at least 2,500 adolescents and secondary school pupils through SMS and social media across 11 schools in the six Education Districts.

    The health information sent through SMS and social media platforms (especially Facebook and 2go) is based on sexual reproductive health, substance abuse and general hygiene.

  • Test HIV, syphilis on your smartphones in 15mins

    Test HIV, syphilis on your smartphones in 15mins

    Technology has proven itself as a major way to make life better as a group of US researchers have come up with a palm-sized device that when connected to a smartphone can diagnose Human Immune Deficiency Virus – HIV and syphilis with good accuracy.

    The new smartphone dongle, which can test blood samples for HIV and syphilis in about 15 minutes, could save millions of lives across the world, scientists claim.

    According to the researchers, the device is dependent on a Smartphone’s audio jack to mimick the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), a well-known test for HIV, and “performs almost as well.”

    The success of the dongle is a follow up on an initial study, involving about 96 women in Rwanda, published in Science Translational Medicine journal.

    However, experts have expressed hope that the lab-on-a-chip device would be helpful, especially in places where field clinics are set up to help remote or under-served populations.

    The team, led by Samuel Sia, Associate Professor of biomedical engineering, Columbia University and a NASA Launch innovator, is aiming for larger clinical trials to confirm the device’s capacity.

    Speaking on the innovation, the engineer said: “Our work shows that a full laboratory-quality immunoassay can be run on a smartphone accessory.

    “Coupling microfluidics with recent advances in consumer electronics can make certain lab-based diagnostics accessible to almost any population with access to smartphones. This kind of capability can transform how health care services are delivered around the world”.

    The study was funded by a Saving Lives at Birth transition grant — which is backed by the US Agency for International Development (USAID), the Gates Foundation, the government of Norway, Grand Challenges Canada, the World Bank and the Wallace H. Coulter Foundation.

    The device is currently on sale for N6,000 ($34) – nearly 540 times cheaper than current lab testing machines, and has already been tested on patients in Rwanda during a pilot study.

    Other countries in Africa including Nigeria, European and Asian countries, anticipate its introduction soonest when passed for public use.