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News
Monday,
March 17th, 2006 10:46 AM
Mozambique
to double number receiving AIDS drugs
MAPUTO
(Reuters) - Mozambique expects to provide free anti-retroviral
AIDS drugs to some 50,000 people by the end of 2006,
more than twice as many as now get the life-prolonging
treatment, the country's health minister said on Friday.
AIDS
is a major development challenge for the country where
a million and a half people have HIV or AIDS.
Mozambique
has been hailed by international lenders as a model
reformer that has grown its economy at an average
rate of 7 percent to 8 percent over the past decade.
Health
Minister Paulo Ivo Garrido told reporters poor transport
in the vast impoverished country and a shortage of
staff and hospitals had hampered the government's
roll-out program.
"These
are issues the government is grappling with,"
he added.
Mozambique
would appoint provincial coordinators for AIDS programs
in all its 11 regions as it battled to combat AIDS,
tuberculosis and malaria -- its key killers.
Garrido
told Reuters last year he expected at least 6,000
health technicians to be dead from AIDS by 2010, critically
hurting the government's plans to expand health and
AIDS-care services.
Only
1 percent of some 70,000 Mozambique children eligible
for anti-retroviral treatment have been put on the
drugs, according to the United Nations children's
agency UNICEF.
[more from Reuters]
Friday,
December 9, 2005 9:30 PM
Event: The Agape MusicWorks Charity Bowl II
New Jersey (ASEM USA)
- On Saturday December 10th, 2005 from 4pm - 7pm,
Agape MusicWorks will be holding their second annual
Charity Bowl event! This year we are honored to be
one of two recipients of their fundraising activities.
The other worthy cause is The Newark Beth Israel Pediatrics
Division. This will be a fun-filled family event with
gospel music, refreshments and fellowship for a great
cause. If you are in the area, please join us!
Event Details:www.agape-musicworks.com/briss/charitybowl.html
Monday,
October 24, 2005 10:30 AM
Staff crunch hurts Mozambique's AIDS battle
MAPUTO (Reuters) - Only a tiny fraction of children in Mozambique eligible for AIDS drugs have access to the medicines due to a severe shortage of staff who themselves are dying of the disease, the country's health minister said.
AIDS is a major development challenge for Mozambique, hailed by international lenders as a model reformer that has grown its economy at an average rate of 7 percent to 8 percent over the past decade and is seen as a strong campaigner against AIDS.
Health Minister Paulo Ivo Garrido said on Monday Mozambique expected at least 6,000 health technicians to be dead from AIDS by 2010, critically hurting the government's plans to expand health and AIDS-care services and access to anti-retroviral drugs (ARVs).
He did not say what percentage of health staff 6,000 technicians constituted but the medical profession has already been depleted by migration to better paying jobs in neighbor South Africa and former colonial power Portugal.
"Availability of medicines alone is not enough to expand ARV treatment. You need human capacity and that is a major constraint," Garrido told parliament.
"The biggest tragedy is to start (ARV) treatment and interrupt it afterwards because there is no one to administer or monitor it," Garrido added.
Only 1 percent of some 70,000 Mozambique children eligible for ARV treatment have been put on the drugs.
[more from Reuters]
posted by ASEM Canada
Wednesday, October 05, 2005 9:55 AM
Mozambique's Aids children slipping through the cracks
[published by Ruth Ansah Ayisi for Mail and Guardian online]
At the tender age of 12, Pedro Moniz* is already a veteran when it comes to observing the regimen of anti-retroviral drugs that keeps Aids-related illnesses at bay.
"I take one tablet at 6am, another at 1.45pm just before school, another at 5.45pm when I return from school -- and the last at 10pm," he says, without pausing to think. "I take them so I don't get sick and so those spots don't come out again."
The son of a now-deceased member of Kindlimuka, an association for HIV-positive persons, Pedro was born with the HI virus. He began taking anti-retroviral drugs (ARVs) three years ago -- one of the first children in Mozambique to receive the medication.
Pedro benefits from a programme supported by the American branch of the Save the Children NGO, which is implemented by Kindlimuka.
Under this initiative, 2 112 children between the ages of seven and 17 who have been infected or affected by HIV and Aids are visited by trained activists who make sure that their basic needs are met. This includes checking that the children are in school whenever possible, and that they have educational materials, clothes and good food. About 50 of the children are also on ARVs.
Drop in the bucket As heartening as this and similar programmes are, however, they only target a fraction of the children who require Aids treatment in Mozambique -- which has an HIV prevalence of 15,6%, according to the government.
There are now 91 000 children under the age of 15 living with HIV in the Southern African country. By June of this year, 500 children were registered on the government's free ARV treatment programme; yet more than 60 000 children aged 14 and below are estimated to be in need of the drugs.
Aids is increasingly emerging as one of the most important causes of illness and death among children in Mozambique. Of the 97 000 people who died from Aids-related illnesses in 2004, 17 500 were children under the age of five.
An average of 500 new HIV infections takes place every day, 90 of them among children who contract the virus from their mothers.
This grim array of statistics begs the question of how authorities can possibly meet the needs of HIV-positive children in Mozambique. Are they effectively in a position of spectating on the death of vast numbers of young citizens?
"The government has a multisectoral approach, which aims to capacitate all the actors, especially those in the community, to help ensure children who are disadvantaged -- who include children affected and infected by HIV and Aids -- have their rights met," says Estrela Herculano, head of the department for women and the family in the ministry of women and social action.
Assistance not enough HIV-positive children who are unable to access ARVs are entitled to a package of assistance that includes treatment for opportunistic infections, food aid from the United Nations World Food Programme and school materials. Some also benefit from the home-based care programme that is coordinated by the ministry of health.
Yet, says Herculano, children appear to be slipping through the cracks.
"We don't know how many children we're reaching. We encourage local authorities to make sure children are registered. But ... in some places there are no roads, so we do not even have access," she notes. "Many families don't even know that that their children are HIV-positive, even when they are sick. Most don't get tested."
The difficulties that surround provision of care to HIV-positive children reflect the larger problems the country faces in catering for its youngest citizens. Vast and sparsely populated, Mozambique is one of the world's poorest states: only about half of school-aged children have the opportunity to study.
And even with the smallest of the small, stigma presents a problem.
"We don't want to single out children who are sick with Aids-related illnesses because of the stigma. They might be discriminated against," says Herculano.
Pedro keeps the fact that he is HIV-positive secret from his neighbours and teachers.
"His teacher just knows he gets sick, but we don't tell her he is on ARVs or is HIV-positive, because he could face discrimination," says Anifa Amade Ibrahim, a representative of Kindlimuka. "The most important thing is that the children who are sick with Aids should be treated like any other children."
Says Pedro, shyly: "I used to miss a lot of school when I was small because of fevers."
Although he has a persistent cough and is very small for his age, Pedro is in far better health than he used to be. It's ironic that this improvement can't be celebrated publicly.
* Certain names have been changed to protect the identities of the individuals concerned
posted by ASEM
Canada
Monday, August 15, 2005 10:00 AM
ASEM Canada is incorporated!
ASEM Canada is an officially recognized non-profit organization
in Canada. Charitable status is now pending. We thank
everyone for their time and patience. Many thanks to
TIDES CANADA
for our partnership which facillitates donations (available
on our donations page)
posted by ASEM
Canada
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