Update

Naomi Watts visits Nyumbani Children’s Home to learn about paediatric HIV treatment

12 July 2017

Naomi Watts, UNAIDS Goodwill Ambassador, visited Nyumbani Children’s Home in Kenya on 11 July to learn about Kenya’s prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV programme and the work done in the home to care for children living with HIV.

In the space of just a few years, as the result of a strong partnership between political leadership, programme implementers and the community, new HIV infections among children aged 0–14 years in Kenya have fallen from 12 000 in 2013 to 6600 in 2015. In June, under the leadership of the First Lady, Margaret Kenyatta, Kenya launched a new framework to accelerate the country’s efforts towards elimination of mother-to-child transmission of HIV and syphilis. The framework calls for the elimination of stigma and discrimination and the creation of an environment that empowers women living with HIV.

Nyumbani Children’s Home opened in 1992 and is currently home to 124 children living with HIV. The home provides nutritional, medical, psychosocial and spiritual care to the children and to the surrounding community, providing a place of safety in Nairobi for abandoned children living with HIV. In addition, the organization has a community- based programme that supports more than 3100 children living with HIV who reside in the informal settlements of Nairobi and 1000 orphans in Nyumbani villages.

Mss Watts and her two sons visited several facilities in the home, including its state-of-art laboratory equipped to undertake early infant diagnosis and viral load testing. Ms Watts congratulated Nyumbani Children’s Home for the impact it makes on a daily basis in the lives of so many remarkable and empowered children. She committed to continue to create awareness of the need to ensure that children living with HIV remain AIDS-free. 

Quotes

"Today I have witnessed incredible successes. The Nyumbani children are a living example of the impact of antiretroviral treatment on the health and well-being of children living with HIV.”

Naomi Watts UNAIDS International Goodwill Ambassador

"We must counter stigma and discrimination, in particular against children living with HIV. They deserve our love and compassion to remain AIDS free.”

Jantine Jacobi UNAIDS Country Director, Kenya

“I observe on a daily basis the power of antiretroviral treatment. Our children are happy, healthy and in school. Together we can make sure that children living with HIV reach their full potential.”

Protus Lumiti Chief Manager, Nyumbani Children’s Home