Uganda AIDS Commission - Uganda Multimedia News & Information https://www.weinformers.com Politics, Health, Sceince, Business, Agriculture, Culture, Tourism, Women, Men, Oil, Sports Wed, 18 May 2016 11:01:58 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.2 Uganda AIDS Commission to engage Religious leaders https://www.weinformers.com/2016/05/18/uganda-aids-commission-to-engage-religious-leaders/ https://www.weinformers.com/2016/05/18/uganda-aids-commission-to-engage-religious-leaders/#respond Wed, 18 May 2016 11:01:58 +0000 http://www.weinformers.com/?p=45098 The Chairman of Uganda AIDS Commission Professor Vinand Nantulya says the commission is going to engage the religious leaders separately from different sects to ensure that they deliver the messages of HIV/AIDS effectively to the followers. While launching a report on the status of the stigma and discrimination among HivAids patients that was carried out in central and south western […]

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The Chairman of Uganda AIDS Commission Professor Vinand Nantulya says the commission is going to engage the religious leaders separately from different sects to ensure that they deliver the messages of HIV/AIDS effectively to the followers.
While launching a report on the status of the stigma and discrimination among HivAids patients that was carried out in central and south western Uganda, Nantulya said that the commission designed HIV messages  for religious leaders to disseminate  but the messages have not been spread up to the grass roots.
Stella Kentutsi from the National forum of people living with HIV Networks in Uganda says that they found out that 57 % of patients were stigmatized but with sensitization they have managed to reduce the rate to 35%.

Uganda AIDS Commission Chairman Professor Vinand Nantulya

Uganda AIDS Commission Chairman Professor Vinand Nantulya

The survey that was done by none governmental organizations working with people living with HIVAIDS including Nsambya Home care  and Kitovu mobile  indicate  that stigma  adds to the stress experienced by people living with HIV making it more difficult  for  them access treatment and care .
The NGOS recommend that Government and other stakeholders should mobilize  and effectively allocate more resources to HIV stigma reduction projects, and faith leaders be encouraged and supported to talk more to people in demystifying HIV stigma.

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Men increasingly refusing to wear condoms with non permanent partners https://www.weinformers.com/2012/02/18/men-increasingly-refusing-to-wear-condoms-with-non-permanent-partners/ https://www.weinformers.com/2012/02/18/men-increasingly-refusing-to-wear-condoms-with-non-permanent-partners/#respond Sat, 18 Feb 2012 08:23:17 +0000 http://www.weinformers.net/?p=16970 A new report from the ministry of health has indicated that HIV/AIDS prevalence is on the increases among the people between 15-49 years of age. The report that was launched by the Uganda AIDS Commissions in Kampala shows that the increasing infections is due to the men who do not like to use protective measures […]

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A new report from the ministry of health has indicated that HIV/AIDS prevalence is on the increases among the people between 15-49 years of age.

The report that was launched by the Uganda AIDS Commissions in Kampala shows that the increasing infections is due to the men who do not like to use protective measures when having sex with their non permanent partners or prostitutes.

Dr. Zainabu Akol says that when conducting the research they found that prostitutes move with condoms but men decline to use those condoms.

Dr. Kihumuro Apuuli, the director of Uganda AIDS commission says that the prevalence rate of HIV/AIDS among the prostitutes in Uganda now stands at about 37 percent.

Dr. Apuuli has advised couples to remain faithful and the pregnant women to always take HIV tests such that if they test positive the children are protected from mother to child HIV infections.

Ultimate Media

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Government launches fresh strategies against HIV/AIDS https://www.weinformers.com/2011/12/02/government-launches-fresh-strategies-against-hivaids/ https://www.weinformers.com/2011/12/02/government-launches-fresh-strategies-against-hivaids/#respond Fri, 02 Dec 2011 11:05:49 +0000 http://www.weinformers.net/?p=17055 Following the tremendous increase in the HIV prevalence in the country, Uganda has been forced to launch three anti HIV/AIDS strategies that will help in driving down the high rates of HIV among the populace staring 2011 until 2016. The launched strategies by the vice president, H.E. Edward Kiwanuka Sekandiinclude, the national HIV prevention strategy, Prevention of mother to child transmission of HIV strategy. Speaking at the launch of […]

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Following the tremendous increase in the HIV prevalence in the country, Uganda has been forced to launch three anti HIV/AIDS strategies that will help in driving down the high rates of HIV among the populace staring 2011 until 2016.

Vice President Edward Kiwanuka Ssekandi

The launched strategies by the vice president, H.E. Edward Kiwanuka Sekandiinclude, the national HIV prevention strategy, Prevention of mother to child transmission of HIV strategy.

Speaking at the launch of the strategies, Sekandi cautions the experts to be extra careful as they implement these new preventive tools noting that they have to fully inform nationals that the disease is still with us.

 But the health minister, Christine Andoa reveals that govt is to sign US.$.270M to be used in fighting malaria, T.B and other related disease which tend to break down the persons’ system when infected with the disease adding that much emphasis is to be put on islands.

However, the chairman, Uganda AIDS Commission (UAC) Prof. Vinand Nantulya challenges teachers to re-embark on teaching pupils and student the dangers of the disease and preventive methods as it was it the past.

He also stresses that men are now leading in transmitting the disease to their wives and children which now calls for change in men’s behaviors.

By Isaac Senabulya

 

 

 

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Uganda urged to tackle HIV transmission drivers to reduce prevalence https://www.weinformers.com/2011/11/25/uganda-urged-to-tackle-hiv-transmission-drivers-to-reduce-prevalence/ https://www.weinformers.com/2011/11/25/uganda-urged-to-tackle-hiv-transmission-drivers-to-reduce-prevalence/#respond Fri, 25 Nov 2011 20:31:06 +0000 http://www.weinformers.net/?p=16948 As Uganda prepares to mark World International day the government has been challenged to address all areas that have been identified to be dangerous in as far as Aids transmission is concerned. Musa Bungudu, the Country  Director of UNAIDS, the UN body responsible for HIV/AIDS, told a joint press Conference at Parliament that unprotected sex and […]

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As Uganda prepares to mark World International day the government has been challenged to address all areas that have been identified to be dangerous in as far as Aids transmission is concerned.

Dr. Kihumuro Apuuli, head of Uganda Aids Commision

Dr. Kihumuro Apuuli, head of Uganda Aids Commision

Musa Bungudu, the Country  Director of UNAIDS, the UN body responsible for HIV/AIDS, told a joint press Conference at Parliament that unprotected sex and mother to child transmission are still leading dangers in the spread of HIV/AIDS.

He says much emphasis needs to put to see that the trend of unprotected sex and mother to child transmission of HIV are brought down in the Country and the World at large.

In a related devolopment the Uganda Aids Commission Director Dr Kihumuro Apuuli expressed fear that the AIDS scourge in Uganda is still growing high despite efforts by Government to sensitize the masses on preventive measures.

Dr. Kihumuro says the aids prevalence among the married couples, boda boda riders, prostitutes among others is still high and something must be done to bring the high prevalence down.

Dr Kihumuro also said the government must take over the funding of Aids programmes in the Country because most donor Countries are pulling out and other are threatening to pull out which he said puts a big risk especially to people who are now on treatment and cannot meet the cost of buying the life prolonging ARV drugs.

By Isaac Senabulya

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UNAIDS Prof. Sheila Tlou appeals to Mrs. Janet Museveni https://www.weinformers.com/2011/11/10/unaids-prof-sheila-tlou-appeals-to-mrs-janet-museveni/ https://www.weinformers.com/2011/11/10/unaids-prof-sheila-tlou-appeals-to-mrs-janet-museveni/#respond Thu, 10 Nov 2011 13:07:51 +0000 http://www.weinformers.net/?p=16636 The UNAIDS Director of the Regional Support Team for East and Southern Africa, Prof. Sheila Tlou, has appealed to Uganda’s First Lady Janet Kataaha Museveni to champion prevention of pediatric HIV infections. South Africa-based Tlou, who arrived in the country on Tuesday for a two-day working visit was meeting Mrs Museveni, who is  also the  minister for Karamoja Affairs and […]

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The UNAIDS Director of the Regional Support Team for East and Southern Africa, Prof. Sheila Tlou, has appealed to Uganda’s First Lady Janet Kataaha Museveni to champion prevention of pediatric HIV infections.

South Africa-based Tlou, who arrived in the country on Tuesday for a two-day working visit was meeting Mrs Museveni, who is  also the  minister for Karamoja Affairs and Ruhaama county Member of parliament  at State House Nakasero .

Tlou said that there is a need to champion for Prevention of Mother to Child Transmission of HIV (PMTCT.

She said that Ugandans should  strive to keep the mothers alive so that we do not create more orphans and she added that should also enroll them on antiretroviral therapy as soon as possible so that they can safely continue breastfeeding and ensure that the babies are healthy.

Tlou commended Museveni on her programmes among the youths, which have greatly reduced HIV prevalence and new infections in this group.

Speaking at the same meeting, the Director General Uganda AIDS Commission, Dr David Kihumuro Apuuli noted that 150,000 children below 15 years in Uganda are HIV positive, with 98,000 needing treatment but only 24,000 are accessing it. Of the ones on treatment, 38% do not return after being diagnosed or after the first treatment.

Apuuli also noted that adults, who should be an example to the youths are the ones contributing to over 50% of new infections majorly because of multiple concurrent partnerships.

The first lady Janet Museveni decried complacency calling on government leaders to ‘re-energize their efforts in the prevention Hiv/aids.

She said that the anti Hiv/aids  campaign relaxed and people forgot that HIV is still with us and she observed the  need to continue drumming HIV prevention messages, especially regarding PMTCT, so that people wake up.

Janet Museveni also commended UNAIDS work in Uganda, regretted that she has been sidetracked with additional responsibilities but committed to lead the fight.

“My traditional area was the youths. But now I’m scattered. It has really distracted me from my calling but I know we really have a challenge. I’m willing to come back on board,” janet museveni pledged.

Tlou’s visit to Uganda is to engage in high level advocacy with GoU leadership, to revitalize the national HIV and AIDS response in the context of getting to: Zero new HIV infections, Zero discrimination and Zero AIDS-related deaths with special focus to Elimination of Mother To Child Transmission.

 

Tlou was accompanied to the meeting by the Minister of Health Dr Christine Andoa, Apuuli, and the head of the AIDS Control Programme in the Ministry Of Health Dr Zainab Akol. Also present were the UN Resident Coordinatorand UNDP Resident Representative, Mr. Theophane Nikyema, UNICEF Representative Dr. Sharad Sapra, and UNAIDS Country Coordinator Musa Bungudu.

News Release:

UNAIDS is an innovative joint venture of the United Nations, bringing together the efforts and resources of the UNAIDS Secretariat and ten UN system organizations to respond to AIDS.

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New Approaches needed in HIV/AIDS fight as new challenges emerge https://www.weinformers.com/2011/03/15/new-approaches-needed-in-hivaids-fight-as-new-challenges-emerge/ https://www.weinformers.com/2011/03/15/new-approaches-needed-in-hivaids-fight-as-new-challenges-emerge/#comments Tue, 15 Mar 2011 14:43:18 +0000 http://www.weinformers.net/?p=9684 After years, in fact decades of operations against HIV/AIDS, where have we reached and what have we learned in efforts to prevent infection and curtail the impacts of HIV/AIDS on our communities? Gerald Businge writes that about the successes and challenges in Uganda and the need for fresh thinking in face of a growing HIV positive population and stagnant infection rates.

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Uganda is internationally acclaimed for its successful fight against HIV/AIDS that has provided lesson to different countries in their own responses to the pandemic. Uganda was among the first countries where HIV/AIDS was confirmed in 1982.

The disease then known as slim (because of making sufferers slender before they died) killed many people as its causes were not known, or how it was transmitted. Disaster of an epidemic proportion was apparent as health workers and the government embarked on spirited efforts to understand and prevent infection by the HIV- Human Immune Virus that was causing AIDS- acquired immune deficiency amongst HIV carriers.

Dr. Kihumuro Apuuli, head of Uganda Aids Commision

Dr. Kihumuro Apuuli, head of Uganda Aids Commision

According to Dr. Philip Kihumuro Apuuli, the Executive Director of the Uganda AIDS Commission (the body responsible for coordinating the country’s response to HIV/AIDS), Uganda managed to reduce the HIV prevalence (infection) rate reduced from about 30 % in the late 1980s to 6.2% in 2002-3.

Strong government leadership and openness about HIV infection (emphasizing the fact it is mostly transmitted through sexual intercourse with an infected partner), broad-based partnerships and effective public education campaigns are said to have contributed to a decline in the number of people living HIV/ AIDS.

[tab:ABC Model]

Making fight against HIV as simple as ABC

President Yoweri Museveni and many other government officials made it a policy to speak about HIV/AIDS and how it is transmitted and can be avoided at every public gathering addressed. Anti HIV/AIDS campaigns were started in 1988 using the much acclaimed ABC (Abstinence, Be Faithful, and Condom use) method.

The policy encouraged youths to abstain from sex until marriage, and those who are married to remain faithful to their partners. It also encouraged those who cannot abstain or be faithful to use condoms in order to prevent themselves from getting infected through sexual intercourse.

This approach in addition to campaigning against stigmatizing those infected and taking the disease as a national problem instead of an issue of those infected, is said to have resulted in behavioral change that saw HIV infection rates declining in Uganda.

But HIV/AIDS has still had a devastating impact on Uganda. HIV/AIDS has killed more than 1 million people (2007 estimates), while reducing life expectancy of many more.  The UAC says an estimated 61,000 people died from AIDS in 2008. About 2 million children have been orphaned by HIV/AIDS. It is estimated that Uganda has about 1.4 million people infected with HIV, in a total population of about 30 million people.

The impact of HIV/AIDS on Uganda’s economy can be seen in the depleted labour force, reduced agricultural output and food security resulting from inability of the sick to engage in economic activities, mostly farming.

Declining success against HIV/AIDS

According to the 2010 National HIV&AIDS Stakeholders & Services Mapping Report, sexual transmission continues to contribute 76% of new HIV infections while mother to child transmission contributes 22%. Currently, estimates indicate that over 100,000 new infections occur annually (during 2008, an estimated 110,694 new HIV infections occurred countrywide and approximately 61,306 people died from AIDS related illness in 2008).

Commercial sex workers, their clients and partners of clients contribute 10% of new infections. Men who have sex with men (homosexuals) and intravenous drug users contribute less than 1%.

According to this report, Ugandan adults living in urban areas are almost twice as likely to be infected with HIV compared to their rural counterparts, yet those in urban areas are presumably more informed about preventive measures against HIV.

The report also notes worsening of behavioural indicators especially an increase in multiple concurrent partnerships. There has also been a shift in the epidemic from people in single casual relationships to those in long-term stable relationships. “Incidence modeling reveals that 43% of new HIV infections are among monogamous relationships while 46% are among persons reporting multiple partnerships and their partners,” the report says.

The latest Uganda HIV/AIDS sero-behavioral survey shows that HIV infection levels for both males and females is highest among those in age category of 30-40 years. This age bracket is presumed to be having adequate knowledge on prevention of HIV infections.

The report also shows that women have higher predominance of HIV infection across all age categories and regions of the country, the reason many activists have been calling for an anti-HIV/ADS strategy and policy that focuses on the vulnerability of women.

Dr. Kihumuro says that all these facts point to the biggest concern in Uganda’s fight against HIV/AIDS, namely, the fact that the country’s HIV prevalence has stagnated between 6 and 7.2 percent since 2001.

“People now think that because we have had HIV for so many years, it is a normal condition among the population,” he says.

Uganda’s new National HIV&AIDS Strategic Plan (NSP) 2007/08-2011/12 and the second Health Sector Strategic Plan 2005-2010 (HSSP-11) spell out the country’s priority of comprehensive, evidence-based HIV prevention interventions to be implemented on a commensurate scale with careful analysis of the current drivers of the HIV epidemic.

Uganda has confirmed itself to Universal Access (UA) to HIV&AIDS prevention, care and treatment in line with World Health Organisation and UNAIDS recommendations. But debates are rolling on whether something new needs to be done in the country’s HIV/AIDS prevention strategy or the response to the pandemic as a whole.

[tab:Limitations of ABC]

There is growing disagreements of what is effective within the ABC method for prevention of HIV infection as well as growing dissatisfaction with ABC as a whole.

The debates with the ABC method

Since 2004, there has been a growing debate about the merits and demerits of the ABC components and also the sufficiency of the ABC approach, as a package in responding to sexual transmission of HIV. Following years of a near miraculous reversal of HIV prevalence, there is general fear that the country is becoming complacent and slowly slipping back into the danger zone. The failure to reduce HIV infections since 2002 has resulted in the questioning of the effectiveness of the current prevention interventions.

The ABC approach has been besieged with a heated debate about the effectiveness and feasibility of its individual components. Some people have emphasized abstinence and be faithful only programs, while other are quick to front condom use citing the risky nature of many people’s sexual behavior.

The Uganda Think Tank on AIDS (UTTA) in a report says that after many years of harmonious implementation of the ABC, and recognition of the fact that positive behavior changes informed by ABC messages collectively contributed to the declining HIV infection rates, HIV/AIDS activists are perturbed with the stagnant prevalence over the years and question whether the approach can bring any more positive results or needs to be revised.

The report says that some proponents of C label Abstinence and fidelity (Being faithful) as impractical or even impossible, while advocates of A&B have advanced issues of immorality and inefficiencies of the condom as a barrier method.

“Promoters of AB de-campaigning C as being an option for the immoral. They claim that the condom is not very effective as a barrier method, alleging the existence of holes big enough to allow the passage of HIV. The promoters of C on the other hand, allege that high level political leaders are de-campaigning the condom due to donor influence, particularly in order to access US Government PEPFAR funding with A&B conditionality,” says the report.

Consequently, the debate has resulted in competing and conflicting messages that confuse both the stakeholders and the target audience, leaving many puzzled about the government’s stand on ABC.

[tab:New Approaches]

New Approach proposed

There are those who believe that the ABC should be replaced with a new method called SAVE- an acronym for Safer practices, Available medications, Voluntary counseling and testing and Empowerment through education.

According to the London-based nonprofit group, Christian Aid which has adopted the SAVE approach, the ABC approach “is not well suited to the complexities of human life” and “fuels stigma and precludes safer sexual practices” by placing people in one of the three categories.

Christian Aid said in a release recently said that Being Faithful to one sexual partner does not automatically protect a person against HIV transmission as one partner may be faithful while another partner is not faithful; meaning the one who is faithful in a relationship is not protected.

They said contrary to the AB or C debate, Condom users are not necessarily people who do not wish to abstain or be faithful, but some people are forced to have sexual relations and use condoms. For long, the example of disadvantaged girls and women who are forced to have sex to get money from rich men has been cited.

Under the SAVE method, “safer practices” include ensuring HIV-negative blood for transfusions, using methods to prevent HIV transmission during sexual intercourse, ensuring the availability of clean needles and adopting medical safety procedures.

This is also reflected in the UTTA report, which re-examines the strength and weaknesses of ABC as a single approach and those of its individual components.

The report notes that despite achievements, the ABC model has not been understood and consistently promoted as one model. “ABC has been looked at in ascending or descending order rather than synergistically,” the report notes.

This is the point well elaborated by proponents of SAVE approach. They point at inadequate targeting of ABC interventions to different population groups for instance the deaf and the blind who have difficulties in accessing information while others fail to act on the messages due to environments they are in, for example married women who cannot insist on condom use if they discover their husbands are having extra-marital affairs.

The AIDS think tank says that the single ABC components largely focus on individual responsibility vis-à-vis social responsibility. Many in the anti HIV/AIDS movement say that by focusing on individuals, the ABC strategy ignores environments, which greatly contribute to personal/individual actions.

[tab:ABC refined]

Abstinence

Abstinence is defined as the choice or decision to refrain, avoid, decline, shun, deny oneself, renounce, or keep from something in this case sex.

Abstinence is promoted widely in Uganda schools

Whereas abstinence is commended for bringing the prevalence down in age group 15-20 years, which also corresponded with delayed sexual debut from 14 to 18 years, it has been found wanting among girls in an environment where boys are encouraged to be sexually aggressive and girls socialized to be submissive. Abstinence is also criticised because it is not an option for women who are in difficult situations and have no choice for instance in instances of rape and child sexual abuse.

Being Faithful

It is defined as having strong belief, confidence in, or conviction, which translates into loyalty, dependability, devotion, fidelity and trustworthiness in case of one’s spouse. Being faithful is rated highly in causing the decline of prevalence in Uganda from 30% in the early 1990s to 6% by the year 2001, also leading to the decline of habits of multiple sexual partners.

The decline in casual sex is said to have registered a 60% decline over the last 20 years. “Despite the positive attributes, the strategy looks at the existing relationship without considering the environment in which the relationship started especially among young people,” the UTTA report says.

Being faithful has been criticized for assuming normative definitions of relationships usually in terms of religion or cultural norms, without for example considering that one party may decide to engage in another sexual relationship and thus put the faithful partner at risk of HIV infection.

Condom use in the fight against HIV/AIDS

Most adverts in Uganda have been saying “if you can’t abstain or remain faithful, then use a condom”. Condoms are being de-campaigned as a reward for the promiscuous largely because they have been promoted as a method for those who cannot abstain or stick to one partner, while some people including President Yoweri Museveni allege that some local sex styles are “too elaborate and do not favor condom use”.

Anti condom campaigners also point to the fact that mostly available condoms on market are for males and therefore controlled by males leaving women in no position to enforce protection. Others point to a lot of misconceptions on condoms, quality and supply factors.

Factors like disparities in free condom distribution across the country, the unforeseen shortage of condoms due to quality problems with some types of condoms.

Uganda's President, Yoweri Museveni and Wife Janet

Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni and Wife Janet

In fact, President Museveni insists that Uganda’s success in reducing HIV/AIDS prevalence levels is much a result of abstinence and be faithful campaign than it is of condom use.

Many organizations led by Human Rights Watch (HRW) and local NGOs argue that Uganda’s past success cannot be wholly attributed to behavioral change factors of abstinence and faithfulness. They have been warning that a shift to abstinence and faithfulness only programs promoted by the US Presidential Emergency Plan for Aids Relief under President George Bush might scale countries like Uganda keen on this to further infections.

Rebecca Schleifer, a researcher with HRW says that censorship of information about condoms in government-funded programs, myths about condoms spread by religious leaders, and restrictions on condoms hamper the fight against the AIDS pandemic.

Uganda’s Presidential Advisor on HIV/AIDS, Kintu Musoke however says the Uganda government is still pursuing the ABC policy, only bringing abstinence and be faithful on the limelight which he says had been cast in the shadows in favour of promoting condom use. “What we are emphasising is that behavioural change is what we need most to fight HIV/AIDS,” Musoke said in an interview.

“The behavioral change remains low relative to the high levels of awareness,” adds Dr. Alex Opio of Uganda’s Aids Control Program.

[tab:Concerns]

Although government insists on behavioral change as the key factor in HIV prevention, the UAC report shows that only 50-55% of young men and women aged 15-19 use condoms during sex with non-regular partners.

Map of Uganda

Map of Uganda

This means that over 40% of the youth aged 15-19 have unprotected sex with non-regular partners, and are at high risk of contracting HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.

Worse still, the survey findings reveal that much as all the districts in the country now have some level of Prevention of Mother To Child Transmission (PMTCT) services, almost half (22) of the districts have disappointing coverage ranging from 25-50%.

So, what is the way forward?

All said, many HIV/AIDS activists still believe ABC as appropriate and effective approach for prevention of transmission of HIV, even when they disagree on which of the components is most effective.

Even the newly advanced SAVE approach, has many ingredients of ABC much as the proponents would wish us to believe it is an independent approach. They have only extended it to areas of care and support, which are necessary in the HIV/AIDS fight.

This may explain why the UTTA report recommends the re-launch of ABC model as ABC plus (ABC+) as a motherboard of future HIV/AIDS interventions to comprehensively accommodate the existing and emerging challenges in the response to the HIV/AIDS pandemic.

UTTA says that ABC should be promoted as one entity, putting emphasis on ABC in the policy strategies and practice as well as addressing the challenges associated with each of the three components. It says that A, B and C should be harmonized through specific policy framework as each of the components re-enforces the effectiveness of the other.

Where as Abstinence is very pertinent to the youth today, especially the girl child, Faithfulness is the best option for married couples in those long-term relationships. C should be targeted for high risk groups, should be promoted among those already infected especially in care settings and is key in discordant relationships,” the report notes.

But all these can work only if there is enhanced and sustained political commitment and leadership on ABC. “Leaders at all levels should be involved in the dialogue, harmonize their positions and provide visible leadership for ABC model. Identify and address human, institutional, societal, cultural and environmental factors and vulnerabilities that predispose certain categories of people to HIV infection,” the report recommends.

This together with bridging the knowledge gaps to raise risk perception, and reducing on confusing and conflicting messages on how to better fight HIV/AIDS will provide a more winning approach against the pandemic, the report says.

[tab:Treatment Issues]

Beyond Prevention to HIV/AIDS Treatment

Yet beyond the prevention issues, it is also apparent that much of the country’s success against HIV/AIDS will depend on how those currently infected are handled. The Executive director of Aids Information Center, Dr. Raymond Byaruhanga, said Uganda faces a challenge of the increasing demand for HIV/ AIDS services due to the increasing number of infections.

The country in 2004 adopted a policy of providing free anti retroviral drugs (ARVS), the life prolonging medicines for HIV positive people. But UTTA says only 135,000 out of more than 300,000 people infected with HIV who urgently need the medicines are able to access them.

This has been blamed on limited government funding to the HIV/AIDS sector. According to the Ministry of Health, more than 80 percent of the country’s HIV funding is from foreign sources; the two leading donors being the Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria and the US President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief.

Uganda’s Minister of Health, Dr. Stephen Malinga says while the government remains committed to its comprehensive plan to fight HIV/AIDS and solve all arising challenges, the country does not have enough money to invest in anti HIV programs. “We have limited resources and there are just so many priorities as a country,” he says.

Dr. Malinga says the Government, with the support of various development partners (DPs), CSOs and other stakeholders is implementing various programs including re-energizing HIV&AIDS control activities across the country, scaling up Anti Retroviral Therapy, HIV Counseling and Testing and PMTC.

The Uganda HIV Prevention Roadmap specifically highlights the following:

  • Prevention of the sexual transmission of HIV,
  • Prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV,
  • Promotion of greater access to HIV counseling and testing (HCT) while promoting principles of confidentiality and consent,
  • Integration of HIV prevention, care and support services with other health care and social services,
  • Integration of prevention into care and support programs for PHAs;
  • Prevention and treatment of STIs,
  • Focusing prevention on vulnerable and higher risk groups including young people,
  • Advocating for protection of rights of women, girls, children, PHAs, IDPs and other minority groups within existing policy and legal frameworks,
  • Preparation for access to and use of promising new technologies for HIV prevention
  • Consideration of appropriate and safe response to new evidence such as circumcision, HSV2 suppression therapy, microbicides and vaccines,
  • Ensuring blood safety and reduce HIV transmission in the health care and other settings.

Related links

Assessing the Macro economic impact of HIV/AIDS in Uganda- a research done by Uganda

Ministry of Finance Planning and Economic Development and United Nations Development Programm

HIV/AIDS in Uganda– a comprehensive analysis of the HIV/AIDS situation in Uganda by avert.org

UNAIDS 2010 report on the global AIDS pandemic

By John  Isingoma and Gerald Businge

 


 

 

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Dr. Kihumuro Apuli urges Ugandan Couples to take HIV tests together https://www.weinformers.com/2010/06/28/dr-kihumuro-apuli-urges-ugandan-couples-to-take-hiv-tests-together/ https://www.weinformers.com/2010/06/28/dr-kihumuro-apuli-urges-ugandan-couples-to-take-hiv-tests-together/#respond Mon, 28 Jun 2010 14:30:01 +0000 http://www.weinformers.net/?p=4188 The Uganda Aids Commission has called upon married people to always take their HIV tests together such that they can know their HIV status together. This comes at a time when the prevalence rate of HIV amongst married people is increasingly causing concern amongst various stakeholders in the fight against HIV/AIDS in Uganda. The Chairperson […]

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The Uganda Aids Commission has called upon married people to always take their HIV tests together such that they can know their HIV status together.

This comes at a time when the prevalence rate of HIV amongst married people is increasingly causing concern amongst various stakeholders in the fight against HIV/AIDS in Uganda.

Dr. Kihumuro Apuuli, head of Uganda Aids Commision

Dr. Kihumuro Apuuli, head of Uganda Aids Commision

The Chairperson of the Uganda Aids Commission, Dr. Kihuumuro Apuuli has told Ultimate Media that when couples test for HIV together, they build trust in each other which goes a long way in fighting unfaithfulness in marriages. He says unfaithfulness is a big cause of HIV/AIDS amongst married couples.

Dr. Kihumuro says the government of Uganda is looking at encouraging couples testing together is an effective way of fighting HIV/AIDS in Uganda.

There is a wave a renewed effort against HIV/AIDS in Uganda after prevalence rates of HIV having stagnated in the past seven years at about 7 percent. Before that, Uganda had been hailed in the fight against HIV/AIDS for having managed through various interventions to pull the prevalence rates of HIV up from over 30% in the early 1980’s to 6% in the late 1990s where it started to stagnate.

By Zacharia Tiberindwa, Ultimate Media

The post Dr. Kihumuro Apuli urges Ugandan Couples to take HIV tests together first appeared on Uganda Multimedia News & Information.

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