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Provide AIDS treatment, protection for women and girls: WHO calls for world countries

GenevaWednesday, December 1, 2004, 08:00 Hrs  [IST]

WHO is calling on countries to set specific national targets for treatment of women and girls and to take measures to ensure equitable access to AIDS prevention and treatment services, for this year's World AIDS day, 1 December. Women and girls living with HIV/AIDS must have access to the antiretroviral medicines that will save their lives, the World Health Organization (WHO) said in a statement released on Tuesday. Although 47 per cent of people infected with HIV around the world are women and girls, there is currently no reliable information on how many of them receive treatment. Most countries collect general data on the number of people being treated, but this is generally not broken out by sex or by age. "To ensure equitable access to prevention and treatment services for women and girls, it is important for countries to set their own national targets," said Dr LEE Jong-wook, WHO director-general. "The targets must match the proportion of men, women and children who are living with HIV and in need of treatment," he added. WHO is also highlighting the need to address violence against women and girls as an integral part of the response to the AIDS pandemic. Studies suggest that for many young women, the first sexual encounter is coerced or unwanted. The risk of HIV transmission increases when sex is forced, especially for girls and young women because their vaginal tracts are immature and tear easily. Violence against women and girls in its different forms increases women's vulnerability to HIV infection and undermines AIDS control efforts. For millions of women, violence and the fear of violence is a daily reality and increasingly, so is AIDS, the statement says. "If we are to succeed in addressing two of the most critical public health problems facing us today - violence against women and the AIDS pandemic - it is also essential to challenge social norms which condone and even promote violence against women. This includes male behaviours which put themselves, their partners and children at risk of HIV infection," said Joy Phumaphi, assistant director-general of Family and Community Health. To ensure equitable access for women and girls, countries need to address barriers preventing the access of women and girls to AIDS treatment and care, such as transport and distance, opening hours and waiting time in clinics. The integration of HIV/AIDS services with sexual and reproductive health services, such as family planning and antenatal care, can also help address women's different needs and reduce stigma. Programmes must take into account how drug costs, user fees or cost-recovery mechanisms might adversely affect women. In many countries, women lack equal access to both money and the opportunity to earn it. This frequently prevents them from getting access to treatment. Therefore free provision of antiretrovirals at the point of service may result in a greater number of women starting on treatment programmes and improved rates of adherence to treatment. Women will particularly benefit from such approaches as they have less time, mobility and resources to access separate services, WHO says. WHO and UNAIDS are today issuing two documents aimed at ensuring equitable access to antiretroviral treatment for potentially underserved, vulnerable and marginalized groups, including women. The first is a policy brief outlining key issues that affect women's access to HIV treatment and care and identifies actions to address the impact of gender inequality on women's use of HIV services. The second, "Guidance on Ethics and Equitable Access to HIV Treatment and Care," explains how ethical analysis, using the principles of utility, efficiency and fairness, can help policy- makers assess the various possibilities and consequences of their choices. The document also stresses the importance of involving all stakeholders in an open and accountable process of planning services and prioritizing groups for treatment. As treatment programmes are implemented, monitoring is important to identify who is getting access to treatment, who is not and why, and how this can be corrected. Unless women and girls become the key focus of prevention, treatment and care programmes, addressing the AIDS pandemic will remain a considerable challenge in large parts of the world, the statement concludes.

 
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