UGA

El camino hacia una vida mejor: La guía del Banco Mundial sobre la prevención del VIH para el sector del transporte en África

14 de julio de 2009

20090706_wb_transport_260_200 Fotografía: Banco Mundial

Al igual que sucede en el resto del mundo, las rutas de transporte del África subsahariana permiten el flujo de personas y bienes, de manera que contribuyen no solo a aumentar la actividad económica, sino también a expandir la riqueza. No obstante, no conviene olvidar que también facilitan la propagación del VIH. Por este motivo, el programa del Banco Mundial sobre el sector del trasporte africano ha publicado un nuevo folleto muy práctico sobre cómo emprender actividades de prevención del VIH e incluirlas dentro de los proyectos de construcción de carreteras.

El folleto, que lleva por título El camino hacia una vida mejor: Una visión general de los papeles y las responsabilidades definidos en las estrategias de prevención del VIH dentro de los proyectos del sector del transporte hace hincapié precisamente en la importancia de esta cuestión. En muchos de los estudios realizados se ha comprobado la existencia de una prevalencia del VIH relativamente alta en el sector, y en particular entre los conductores de camión de largo recorrido. Algunos de ellos han demostrado que los conductores de camión de Kenya, Rwanda y Uganda tienen casi el tripe de posibilidades de vivir con el VIH que la población general.  

La mayoría de los trabajadores del transporte pasan semanas o incluso meses fuera de sus casas, y mantienen relaciones sexuales con múltiples personas, lo que puede contribuir a la propagación del VIH. En Nigeria, por ejemplo, los datos de uno de los estudios llevados a cabo reflejaron que cada conductor suele tener una media de seis parejas sexuales a lo largo de todo el recorrido. Este hecho indica, así pues, que la vulnerabilidad de las personas que se mueven normalmente en el entorno del transporte ha aumentado. En la Carretera Transafricana de Kenya, se han detectado comportamientos de alto riesgo en algunos grupos de jóvenes que frecuentaban las paradas de camiones. Asimismo, se ha registrado una incidencia de infecciones de transmisión sexual del 50% en niñas, y del 30% en el caso de los niños.

20090706_wb_transpor1t_260_200 Fotografía: Banco Mundial

El camino hacia una vida mejor pone de relieve las medidas más prácticas que se pueden llevar a cabo, a fin de prevenir nuevas infecciones entre los trabajadores del transporte y las comunidades próximas a las zonas de carretera, y presta especial atención a los trabajos de construcción de calzadas. Además, en el documento se recoge una relación de todo aquello que los ministerios de transporte, los diferentes equipos del Banco Mundial, los contratistas, los asesores, las unidades de proyecto nacionales, los donantes y las ONG “deben y no deben hacer” a la hora de poner en marcha dichas medidas. Por otro lado, se proporciona también una visión general de los papeles y de las responsabilidades de las diferentes personas que participan en el proceso: así, se abarcan aspectos que van desde la identificación de las cuestiones relacionadas con la preparación, hasta la puesta en marcha y la conclusión. Una estrategia de prevención del VIH no debe emprenderse como una continuación de dicho proceso, sino que debe formar parte integral del proyecto.

El folleto constituye la última publicación complementaria a la información y las herramientas que se encuentran disponibles en el sitio web del programa especial sobre el sida del Banco Mundial acerca del sector del transporte africano.

20090706_wb_transport2_260_200 Promover la prevención del VIH en el sector del transporte constituye un elemento clave de la respuesta mundial al sida.
Fotografía: Banco Mundial

La mencionada publicación representa el resultado del Programa de políticas de transporte del África subsahariana (SSATP, por sus siglas en inglés) y sus esfuerzos por instar al diálogo y a la colaboración a un gran número de asociados, entre los que se encuentra el Banco Mundial, con el fin de proporcionar el apoyo necesario en materia de VIH. El SSATP es una asociación sin precedentes compuesta por 35 países, ocho comunidades económicas regionales, tres instituciones africanas (incluidas la Unión Africana y la Nueva asociación para el desarrollo de África), así como por diferentes asociados internacionales, que reconoce la importancia del sector del transporte dentro del marco de la consecución de sus objetivos: reducir la pobreza, y promover el crecimiento económico la integración regional.

Por todo ello, si queremos que el sector del transporte cumpla con su papel capital, es necesario hacer frente a los posibles efectos devastadores de la epidemia de sida de forma eficaz. Y El camino hacia una vida mejor constituye una guía ejemplar que puede contribuir a conseguir este objetivo.

Rostros contra el estigma y la discriminación relacionados con el VIH

01 de octubre de 2008

UGA_RC_200.jpg
El objetivo de esta campaña, también
conocida como la campaña de los
“rostros”, era eliminar el estigma asociado
con el VIH mostrando fotos acompañadas
de los testimonios de ugandeses que
viven con el VIH.
Fotografía: UNAIDS/J.Ewen

El VIH se ha asociado frecuentemente con comportamientos que suelen ser considerados social o moralmente inaceptables, como el trabajo sexual, las relaciones extramatrimoniales o con múltiples parejas, el sexo entre hombres y el consumo de drogas inyectables. Solo este hecho, alimentado por altos niveles de ignorancia, negación, miedo e intolerancia, ha estigmatizado en gran medida la infección por el VIH.

Para eliminar los prejuicios sobre las personas que viven con el VIH y concienciar al mismo tiempo a la gente sobre diferentes cuestiones relacionadas con el sida, ONUSIDA, en colaboración con la Cruz Roja de Uganda, ha creado una campaña titulada "La verdad no está escrita en tu rostro".

El objetivo de esta campaña, también conocida como la campaña de los “rostros”, era eliminar el estigma asociado con el VIH mostrando fotos acompañadas de los testimonios de ugandeses que viven con el VIH. La campaña ponía de relieve al mismo tiempo que el rostro de una persona no muestra si es seropositivo. Como resultado, ha manifestado la necesidad de adoptar medidas y comportamientos de prevención efectivos, como limitar el número de parejas sexuales y utilizar sistemáticamente el preservativo para prevenir la transmisión del VIH.

“A pesar de la larga historia de la epidemia en este país, sigue existiendo una falsa creencia en Uganda de que "es otro" el que vive con el VIH, o hay un sólido trasfondo moral que sugiere que son los profesionales del sexo, etc., los que están afectados por el virus”, afirmó Malaya Harper, coordinadora de ONUSIDA en este país. Esto ha provocado que exista cierta autocomplacencia y que gran parte del cambio de comportamiento positivo impulsado en los años 90 se esté debilitando. "La campaña de los "rostros" ha demostrado que estos prejuicios son erróneos y ha puesto de manifiesto la importancia de prevenir el VIH", añadió.

UGA_RC2_200.jpg
La experiencia nos dice que un
movimiento sólido de personas
seropositivas que ofrezca un apoyo
común y una voz a nivel local y nacional
es especialmente eficaz a la hora de
enfrentarse al estigma.
Fotografía: UNAIDS/J.Ewen

El estigma y la discriminación constituyen violaciones de los derechos humanos y debilitan los esfuerzos de salud pública dirigidos a detener la epidemia. Las personas seropositivas son a menudo víctimas de la discriminación. Muchas han sido expulsadas su trabajo o de sus hogares, rechazadas por familiares y amigos, o asesinadas debido a su estado seropositivo.

Juntos, el estigma y la discriminación conforman uno de los mayores obstáculos a la hora de tratar eficazmente la epidemia. Pueden disuadir a los gobiernos de responder y tomar las acciones oportunas contra el sida, y a las personas, de averiguar su estado serológico. Asimismo, impiden a quienes ya saben que están infectados revelar su diagnóstico y solicitar tratamiento y cuidados.

La experiencia nos dice que un movimiento sólido de personas seropositivas que ofrezca un apoyo común y una voz a nivel local y nacional es especialmente eficaz a la hora de enfrentarse al estigma.

Los ejecutores de programas sobre VIH se reúnen en Kampala para intercambiar ideas y compartir sus experiencias en la respuesta al sida

03 de junio de 2008

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Su excelencia el presidente de la república
de Uganda, Yoweri Kaguta Museveni
(izquierda) saludando al director ejecutivo
del ONUSIDA, el Dr. Peter Piot (centro) y
el Dr Michel Kazatchkine, director ejecutivo
del Fondo Mundial (derecha).
Fotografía: ONUSIDA/M.Mugisha

¿Qué es un ejecutor de programas sobre VIH? Dependiendo de a quién pregunte en el Reunión de ejecutores de programas sobre VIH que empieza hoy, 3 de junio, en Kampala, Uganda, obtendrá una respuesta diferente. Sin embargo, todas tendrán posiblemente un denominador común: es un mediador para compartir lecciones aprendidas y prácticas óptimas sobre la prestación de servicios a los afectados por la epidemia del sida.

Durante los próximos cinco días, unos 1.700 participantes (gobiernos, ONG, organizaciones internacionales como el ONUSIDA y otros asociados de las Naciones Unidas, el sector privado y grupos de personas que viven con el VIH) intercambiarán ideas y ofrecerán ejemplos de cómo superar los obstáculos que se presentan al implantar servicios de tratamiento, prevención, atención y apoyo relacionados con el VIH.

El ONUSIDA, copatrocinador del evento, junto con el Plan de emergencia del presidente de los Estados Unidos para el alivio del sida (PEPFAR), el Fondo Mundial, el UNICEF, el Banco Mundial, la OMS y la Red Mundial de Personas que Viven con el VIH (GNP+), intercambiarán ejemplos de cómo han trabajado, tanto ellos como sus copatrocinadores y otros asociados, para ayudar a los países a implantar programas del VIH.

Algunos de los principales representantes del ONUSIDA y expertos temáticos participarán en diferentes actos, desde plenarios y sesiones hasta reuniones satélite, centrados en abordar las prioridades y ampliar las iniciativas de prevención locales; mejorar la coordinación y la armonización entre los asociados en la ejecución; fomentar la comunicación para el cambio social, especialmente en lo que respecta a las normas sobre el sida; y analizar el papel de la sociedad civil en el fortalecimiento de las respuestas al VIH.

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El director ejecutivo del ONUSIDA, Dr.
Peter Piot dirigiéndose a los participantes
durante la ceremonia de inauguración de
la reunión. 3 de junio, Kampala, Uganda.
Fotografía: ONUSIDA/M.Mugisha

El director ejecutivo del ONUSIDA, Dr. Peter Piot, presidirá la ceremonia de inauguración junto con el presidente de Uganda, Yoweri Kaguta Museveni; el embajador Mark Dybul, coordinador mundial para el sida de los Estados Unidos/PEPFAR; el Dr. Michel Kazatchkine, director ejecutivo del Banco Mundial; y el Dr. Kevin Moody, director ejecutivo de GNP+.

Esta es la segunda reunión de ejecutores de programas sobre el VIH. La primera tuvo lugar en 2007 en Kigali, Rwanda.

Reunión 2008 de ejecutores de programas sobre VIH/sida

02 de abril de 2008

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La Reunión de ejecutores de programas sobre VIH/sida se celebrará del 3 al 7 de junio en Kampala (Uganda). El lema de este año es "Crecer asociándonos: la superación de los obstáculos para la implementación", con el que se reconoce el rápido crecimiento que han experimentado los programas sobre el VIH en todo el mundo.

Juntos, los ejecutores de programas intercambiarán prácticas óptimas y experiencias adquiridas en el transcurso de la implementación de sus programas sobre el sida, centrándose en el aumento de la capacitación de los servicios locales de prevención, tratamiento y atención; el mantenimiento de los controles de calidad; y la coordinación entre asociados.

Visitar la web oficial (en inglés)

Partnerships and linking for action

06 de marzo de 2008

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The Global Health Workforce Alliance (GHWA) held the first ever Global Forum on Human Resources for Health in Kampala, Uganda from March 2-7, 2008. The GHWA, hosted and administered by the World Health Organization (WHO), has been created to identify and implement solutions to the health workforce crisis.

UNAIDS Executive Director  Dr Peter Piot gave the following plenary speech on "Partnerships and linking for action".

Download speech as PDF

Plenary speech by Dr Peter Piot, UNAIDS Executive Director

Kampala, Uganda 5 March, 2008.

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UNAIDS Executive Director Dr Peter Piot addressing plenary at the Global Forum on Human resources for Health, in Munyonyo, Kampala, 5 March 2008
Credit: UNAIDS/C. Opolot

Thank you Sigrun – and thank you for inviting me here today.

I came to Kampala for three reasons. Firstly, this Forum is one of the most important meetings in public health to take place this year. We are starting to build a coalition to address one of the greatest obstacles to health.

Secondly, I am here to pledge the firm support of UNAIDS to this initiative.

Thirdly, it is time to de-polarize this debate. Whether we invest in the AIDS response or in strengthening health systems. It is not a question of one or the other. Even when it comes to AIDS, it is not simply a question of strengthening health services but also community mobilization. We must not forget about people or health outcomes

The issue of human resources for health is complex. But we all know it’s not a new one. I lived it myself in the mid-70s in rural Zaire. But nor is it limited to Africa. Last week I was in India where this is an enormous maldistribution of human resources for health.

The shortage results from decades of under-investment by governments, donors and international agencies. It has been intensified by globalization, but globalization may also bring some of the solutions. Responsibility for the current situation is shared – between donors, national governments, NGOs, research organization and international organizations among others. We therefore have a shared duty to address it. That’s why this afternoon’s panel, with its focus on partnership, is so vital.

The debate we are having now is long overdue. And a major reason for its happening at all is AIDS!

One of the peculiar characteristics of AIDS is that it exposes injustices. AIDS - more than any other issue - has thrown a spotlight on the urgent need to strengthen human resources for health, for three reasons.  Firstly, AIDS represents a significant burden on health systems. In some countries, half of all hospital beds are occupied with patients with AIDS-related illnesses. Secondly, to expand ART, and to make ART sustainable, we need strong health systems. Thirdly, being a health worker does not protect you from becoming infected. Botswana, for example lost approximately 17% of its healthcare workforce to AIDS between 1999 and 2005.

There have been good examples of how AIDS investment has helped overcome the human resources for health crisis. I remember well going to Malawi in 2004 with Sir Suma Chakrabarti, then Permanent Secretary of the UK’s DFID. AIDS had brought the health workforce literally to its knees. There was no way it could cope. It was an emergency that required exceptional measures. DFID and other donors financing the sector agreed to fund a groundbreaking initiative, the Emergency Human Resources Programme, to top up salaries for nurses and other health care workers as an incentive not to leave the country. This was totally novel: donors usually resist paying salaries, but in this case we managed to break the taboo.  I’m glad to say that the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria is now supporting this programme.

This is just one example of another characteristic of AIDS: it forces us to do things differently. WHO’s “Treat, train, retain” initiative for health-workers with HIV is another new and pragmatic approach. I don’t know of any other programme that starts by addressing the health of the workers involved. It provides wins all round – to the health workers themselves, to the people who need their services, and to the health sector as a whole. So, when we are talking about strengthening health systems, let’s first make sure that people stay alive! But good partnerships require more than processes. There are too many partnerships that are not enough about results and outcomes.

AIDS funding and programming enhanced essential infrastructure for health facilities. Where HIV services have been integrated into existing service delivery sites, AIDS money helped renovate health facilities, upgraded clinics and laboratories and provided training opportunities for health care workers.

AIDS has also helped promote “task shifting”, an old concept/idea in public health – moving responsibility for certain tasks to other health-workers and community members to free up doctors and nurses to take care of other patients and to deliver other essential health services. Here in Uganda, there is an increasing trend for people living with HIV to take on tasks such as counseling for testing, adherence support, treatment literacy and to produce good quality outcomes.  In Kenya, several organizations have been implementing prevention, treatment literacy and home based care programmes, which are led by people living with HIV at the community level.  Women Fighting AIDS in Kenya, supported by UNICEF in Kisumu and Port Reitz General Hospitals, trained PLWHAs who were then used as PMTCT champions to provide counseling to ante-natal mothers and their partners.

We also see, particularly here in Africa that faith-based organizations play a major in the fight against AIDS providing vital HIV care and treatment services. For example, Christian hospitals and health centers are providing about 40% of HIV care and treatment services in Lesotho and almost a third in Zambia. In other countries, the formal and informal private sector is also very important.

AIDS has brought in new resources, to benefit not only HIV programmes but health systems more widely. Take for example the Haitian “accompagnateurs” – community workers who have been brought into the health workforce through the AIDS programmme. Or in Rwanda, HIV treatment and care was integrated with regular health services, resulting in better coverage for maternal and child health according to a study by Family Health International (FHI) presented at last year’s PEPFAR Implementers Meeting in Kigali.  Les Mutuelles de Santé is another example of financing scheme to mobilize resources for health services.

So I have serious issues with the current wave of statements like “There’s too much money going to AIDS” or “Donors should prioritize health system strengthening”. They completely ignore the growing body of evidence that AIDS expenditure strengthens the health sector and contributes to broader development programmes, besides the fact that AIDS programmes are having measurable results, saving millions of lives. Indeed, AIDS has been an advocate for health systems strengthening.

They also seem to assume that dealing with HIV is mostly about treatment. It isn’t! For every one person we put on antiretroviral therapy, another four or five become infected with HIV. If we don’t radically enhance HIV prevention, demands for treatment will just keep on growing, placing an even greater burden on health systems in the future.

And prevention – except for PMTCT – is far more than a health issue. Prevention is a community based action. Effective HIV prevention derives from a range of multi-sectoral interventions (governments, nongovernmental organizations, faith-based organizations, the education sector, media, the private sector and trade unions and people living with HIV).

A lot of the recent surge of funding started as a direct consequence of the AIDS epidemic. AIDS advocacy did not only succeed in mobilizing money, but it also highlighted the profound disparities in health services that separated the developing countries from the developed world. It is however true that  there are examples where AIDS related activities and AIDS funding are taking away health workers from other tasks. AIDS funding created new and more interesting job opportunities for doctors and nurses with NGOs and foreign aid agencies and thus can be a drain on the public sector. We have seen it happening in Malawi and in Zambia where focus of disease programmes shifted to HIV. However, and certainly in the heavily affected countries, the AIDS burdens for health services is also a reality. We need to find common solutions and ways of working together.

This brings me to my next point. AIDS has taught us about the critical value of partnerships. Tackling AIDS is one of the toughest challenges the world faces today. Like dealing with climate change, it’s tremendously complex - way beyond the capacity of any single sector or institution. It’s one of those issues that jolts us out of our comfort zone, and forces us to create new alliances with a variety of constituencies – across sectors and at state and non-state level.

UNAIDS itself is a joint programme. We are working with a wide range of constituencies – government, scientists, business, labour, and the media. One of the most important partnerships of all has been our relationship with civil society. It was the activists who kick-started the AIDS movement. Without them, we wouldn’t have achieved anything like the progress we’ve made.  It’s thanks to these partnerships that we have been able to mobilize political momentum around AIDS, to leverage funding to $10 billion per year.

In the twelve years since UNAIDS was created, we’ve learnt a lot about partnerships. We’ve seen the advantages of being able to convene diverse actors from public, private, and non profit sectors – all with different strengths. They have the potential to achieve spectacular results – way beyond anything they could hope to achieve on their own.

But coordination and accountability are still important. That’s why UNAIDS established the Three Ones principles, as a framework for partnerships on AIDS.  Just to remind you, these are: one agreed national action framework, one national coordinating authority and one agreed monitoring and evaluation system.

The lessons we’ve learnt through implementing the Three Ones are salutary – and very relevant to the aims of this Alliance. The Agenda for Action is right to highlight the need for “national responses to be guided by a national leadership that convenes all actors around one agreed national effort”, and to point to the importance of accountability. The challenge is to engage serious commitment at all levels – in-country, in donor capitals and international organization headquarters. This requires time and effort. But it will be time and effort well spent.

I began today by saying that addressing the shortage of human resources for health was a joint responsibility. It is something that no institution can tackle alone. It is complex, cross-sectoral and long-term. And, like AIDS, it is not a quick-fix problem and there is no one solution that fits all. This may be a major reason why so little has been done before. Another reason may be the fact that the current crisis of human resources for health is also a highly political issue and therefore any possible solutions need to have full political support. But coming together in this alliance is in itself a tremendous step forward. There is a lot at stake; therefore our response must address the emergencies of today and to draw up longer-term plans for the future.

The Agenda for Action offers a comprehensive menu of activities, but I want to suggest some very concrete actions where we can all work and benefit together.

The first is that we must build partnerships far beyond the public sector. Partnerships are crucial for the success of any solution. We must also look at the critical role of non-state actors in the provision of services and their role in the training of human resources. In many countries, 40 to 60% of health services are delivered by the private sector. We have to establish more private/public partnerships with greater engagement of the private sector, beyond workplace programmes. Equally, in many countries, particularly here in Africa, many clinics and health centers are run by faith-based organization. We need to bring them all into the policy dialogue of heath services provision.

The second is to engage the full participation of civil society. As I mentioned earlier, civil society has been at the heart of the AIDS response from the very beginning. And its presence there has been vital. Not only does civil society activism mobilize action, but community members are an invaluable source of knowledge about what works and about how to reach people. We must listen and learn from them, and at the same time invest in building their capacity to deliver alongside that of public sector.

The third is for health ministries to make improving human resource management a priority. This is implicit in the Agenda for Action. But I think we need to spell it out more clearly. Today’s crisis has come about for two reasons. Lack of investment and lack of management. There’s a lot to do, but one of the first steps should be to establish incentives for performance and raise health-worker morale.

Fourth, we need to work together to question and challenge our concepts of fiscal space, predict medium term expenditure frameworks and the suitability of salary supplementation. We have to involve ministries of finance in the discussions of solutions. We should also work together with the World Bank and IMF on these constraints.

There is also the need to address the issue of public sector pay and work conditions. To address issues such as poor infrastructure, lack of equipment and drugs, long hours and heavy workloads and lack of career development in addition to poor remuneration. This needs to be combined with putting human resources for health on the agenda of civil service reform and donor willingness support and invest in supplementing health workers’ salaries and training. Donors and countries should consider the lessons learnt from the Malawi experience.

These issues are at the heart of any assessment of countries’ ability to scale up the response and the achievements of the MDGs. They are relevant for all of the health MDGs and need close examination and a common assessment of the risks and opportunities.

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Press conference at the close of Global Forum on Human resources for Health, Kampala 5 March, 2008. (From left): Chair of the board Global Health Workforce Alliance, Dr Lincoln Chen; UNAIDS Executive Director, Dr Peter Piot and Representative of Women Living with HIV in Uganda, Beatrice Were.
Credit: UNAIDS/C. Opolot

We can be very ambitious, but need clear targets, goals and a partnership, where put the institutional interest aside. Fight for common good and common goal. We need to re-set the rules and to put into practice what has been discussed globally at country level. Every research programme must include overhead (/indirect costs for strengthening capacity. This is starting to be done among largest investors in heath (GAVI; GF; PEPFAR etc).

We also need to find a practical way to compensate low and middle-income countries that are losing their skilled staff in whose education they have invested.

The final – and most relevant for this afternoon’s session - is to be serious about applying the Three Ones principles, for all parties to come together and align around a single strategic plan for strengthening human resources for health that focuses clearly not just on process but on results.  One National AIDS Coordination authority and one agreed country-level monitoring and evaluation system. Such a framework has been invaluable for a well coordinated AIDS response. We are not there yet, but we have made progress.

If we make progress on action plan, it will be because have worked together. It is through diversity we will success. Pragmatic approach is needed, one step at a time, and strong leadership which will hold us together. I believe we have that leadership.

That may sound ambitious. But if we can come back in a year’s time and say we’ve made progress in these four areas, the world’s health workforce will look a lot more robust than it does today – and its population will be fitter as a result.

We have to act now and “to work together to ensure access to a motivated, skilled, and supported health worker by every person in every village everywhere.” Dr. LEE Jong-wook

Thank you.

Health workforce crisis limits AIDS response

29 de febrero de 2008

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The Global Health Workforce Alliance (GHWA) is convening the first ever Global Forum on Human Resources for Health in Kampala, Uganda from March 2-7, 2008.

The GHWA, hosted and administered by the World Health Organization (WHO), has been created to identify and implement solutions to the health workforce crisis. What is this crisis and how does it impact on the AIDS response?

Healthcare systems depend on trained staff

One of the major obstacles identified to scaling up access to HIV prevention, treatment, care and support in a country is a weak national healthcare system.

The question of human resources for health is a critical factor in any effective response to AIDS. A shortage of trained health care workers, particularly in low and middle-income countries, presents a real challenge to the ability of a country to respond to the HIV prevention, treatment and care needs of their populations.

In parts of sub-Saharan Africa shortages are so acute that they limit the potential to scale up programmes aimed at achieving health-related Millennium Goals including the roll-out of treatment for AIDS. - World Health Assembly, 2005

WHO estimates that more than 4 million additional doctors, nurses, midwives, managers and public health workers are urgently needed to avert serious crises in health-care delivery in 57 countries around the world—26 of these in sub-Saharan Africa. WHO estimates that at least 1.3 billion people around the world lack access to even the most basic health care.

Insufficient human resources has been identified as a primary obstacle to the delivery of antiretroviral treatment and other HIV-related services in many countries in Eastern Europe, Africa and Asia. Many healthcare systems have poor availability and quality of pre- and post-test counselling, health education, home care, diagnosis and treatment of opportunistic infections.

Governments pledge to increase capacity

At the 2006 High Level Meeting on AIDS, UN Member States reaffirmed their commitment to fully implement the 2001 Declaration of Commitment on HIV/AIDS and further strengthened international commitment on AIDS by:

“Pledging to increase capacity of human resources for health, and committing additional resources to low- and middle-income countries for the development and implementation of alternative and simplified service delivery models and the expansion of community-level provision of comprehensive AIDS, health and other social services.” However translating government commitment to increasing capacity into more health workers on the ground is a challenge of some complexity.

Balancing macroeconomic stability and staff retention

While AIDS funding has increased in recent years, simply pouring this into the healthcare system of a country to strengthen capacity is not the solution.

Most economists agree that a high rate of growth of a money supply causes a high rate of inflation - a rise in the general level of prices of goods and services in a given economy over a period of time.

Governments believe that fiscal and monetary policies – to keep inflation low - are needed to control and manage their economy to prevent potentially damaging sharp shocks and fluctuation in growth.

Low-income countries with high HIV-prevalence have to juggle the need to invest in their healthcare systems with a responsibility to maintain macroeconomic stability – nationally and regionally.

These economic policies include keeping salaries low and so constrain the hiring of the doctors, nurses, community health-care workers. Low salaries lead to low worker morale and low productivity and make it extremely difficult for some countries to retain their staff.

Open labour markets mean skilled professionals are migrating in record numbers to high-income countries, draining human capacity where it is most needed.

Global Forum on Human Resources for Health

Consensus is growing that this is a global crisis which calls for coordinated action.

The Global Health Workforce Alliance (GHWA) has been established to explore and implement solutions to this health workforce crisis. It is hosted and administered by the World Health Organization (WHO).

As a first step in the process, the GHWA are holding the first Global Forum on Human Resources for Health in Kampala this week. This meeting brings together government leaders, health and development professionals, civil society and academics from around the world who hope to consolidate a global movement on this.

Participants will explore solutions to improving education, training, and health sector management as well as looking at recent trends in migration.

AIDS on the agenda at Commonwealth Heads meeting

26 de noviembre de 2007

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UNAIDS Deputy Executive Director Ms Deborah
Landey talking with the Commonwealth Youth
Delegate from Botswana Thata Kebadire. Entebbe
Uganda.17 November 2007.

The need to further engage young people in the AIDS response was a key element of discussion at the recent Commonwealth Heads of Governments Meeting (GHOGM), which took place in Kampala, Uganda.

UNAIDS Deputy Executive Director Deborah Landey joined Uganda AIDS Commission Director General Dr David Kihumuro Apuuli and youth representatives Johnah Josiah of Kenya and Mobafa Baker of Trinidad in a plenary session at the meeting, focusing on the health of young people. During her intervention, Ms Landey discussed the importance of engaging young people in the HIV response.

The Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting is a biennial meeting convening representatives from 53 member states. The commitment to young people played a significant part in this year’s meeting, which was officially opened by the Head of the Commonwealth, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II.

Deborah Landey took part in the meeting as part of a country visit to Uganda where she also met with various leaders in Uganda’s AIDS response from government and civil society.




Links:

Read UNAIDS Deputy Executive Director's speech
View photo gallery of UNAIDS Deputy Executive Director's visit
Visit the CHOGM 2007 Uganda Web site

Sida, pobreza y desarrollo humano

31 de octubre de 2007

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Las estrategias del VIH funcionan mejor cuando se tiene clara la relación que existe entre el sida, la pobreza y el desarrollo humano. En un artículo publicado en una revista científica de renombre, PLoS, ONUSIDA examina dicha relación, así como el llamado “círculo vicioso”, en el que los efectos del sida aumentan la pobreza y la privación social mientras la desigualdad socio-económica incrementa la vulnerabilidad de contraer el VIH.



Enlaces:

Leer artículo: - La cuadratura del círculo: sida, pobreza y desarrollo humano (en inglés)
Leer presentación: - VIH y retos de desarrollo para África (pdf, 841.02 Kb) (en inglés)

AIDS and Human Rights activist awarded

28 de noviembre de 2006

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Photo courtesy of "In these times" Magazine 

AIDS and human rights are inextricably linked as demonstrated by Beatrice Were, a leading advocate for the rights of people living with HIV in Uganda who recently received the Human Rights Watch Defender Award in recognition of her work.

Mrs. Were is the co-founder of the National Community of Women Living with AIDS (NACWOLA), a grassroots organization that provides services to more than 40,000 women in 20 districts of Uganda. She has served as Executive Coordinator of the International Community of Women Living with HIV/AIDS, Uganda, has worked with UNAIDS over the years and was formerly a member of the UNAIDS Reference Group on HIV and Human Rights. Beatrice Were is currently working as the National HIV/AIDS coordinator for ActionAID International and has collaborated with different organizations to re-address the HIV prevention policies towards a more evidence and rights based response to AIDS in Uganda.

Beatrice Were talks to UNAIDS about the implications of the award on her work and on the rights of people living with HIV.


What does this award mean to you?

Basically this award means that my work is being recognised but also, in a much broader sense, it means that there is recognition of HIV as a Human Rights issue and more specifically there is recognition of the rights of women living with HIV. This award has also challenged me to do more to sustain the visibility of the rights of the people living with HIV as part of the Human Rights.

Is this award going to have any repercussions on your work?

As an HIV positive activist, my work towards the promotion of Human Rights and specially those of women living with HIV has been regarded by governments or scientists as emotional or unscientific. The award gives me the opportunity to show that contributions from activists like me and contributions from women living with HIV are essential to an effective response to AIDS and specifically in protecting the rights of people living with HIV.

Please, tell us about your professional trajectory.

I started from the grassroots level by working with home-based-care programmes for people living with HIV. Soon after, I decided to start an organization to support women living with HIV, addressing issues of property rights, doing advocacy, awareness raising and fighting stigma and discrimination. Today I focus my work on policy issues, accountability and critical engagement with government, donors and stakeholders to ensure that HIV is treated as a Human Rights issue. I’m also working to address gender inequality and access to treatment and prevention as well as dealing with issues of government corruption on abuse of funds committed to AIDS programmes.

What inspires your work?

After my husband’s death, I also tested HIV positive. My in-laws wanted to grab my property, take my children and marry me to my brother in law. Although I was still a young woman then I struggled, I fought back for my rights and I started speaking out. My inspiration today comes from the fact that what I started as a personal struggle when my own rights were abused has helped and improved the live of thousands of women. I am encouraged because I have seen that the power that lies within me has changed things and I believe that any woman once they are informed and supported can also make that change happen.

What do you think the role of the community is in promoting human rights in relation to HIV?

First of all communities need to be conscious that human rights are not a favour from government, that they own those rights and that they have the power to demand governments, NGOs and civil society to respect and fulfil those rights. Communities can do a lot by mobilising themselves and use the power of numbers to speak loud to address human rights and HIV, issues of property rights of women, gender violence or marital rape. The other thing that communities can do is protect the rights of people affected by HIV by respecting them and reducing stigma. The engagement of community leaders is particularly important to lead this process.

What has changed in the last ten years in Uganda?

On the positive side, what has changed is the recognition, even up to the UN level, that people living with HIV are critical partners in the response to the epidemic. There is also consciousness and high level of awareness of women’s rights and to some extent acknowledgement of those rights has been important. However, on the negative side, what is changing in Uganda is that we are seeing a new wave of stigma through a moralisation of the disease by new and radical evangelical groups. The influence of US policy on Uganda’s prevention strategy is undermining the efforts that Uganda has made in the last 25 years. There is also corruption in Uganda, embezzlement of the Global Fund money, reduced political will by government over HIV prevention and care programmes, and when a lot of money is coming into the country to strengthen the health system, we are seeing ARVs expiring and an incompetent health system unable to deliver antiretroviral therapy to the 130.000 Ugandans who need it consistently. So it is quite disappointing that Uganda which has been a success story in its response to AIDS is now undermining human rights not respecting the right to health or the right to information by only promoting abstinence-until-marriage prevention programmes.

How do you see the future in terms of Human Rights and HIV?

Personally I see a lot of opportunities in the near future because now there is recognition by international human rights groups like Human Rights Watch or UNAIDS through its Gender and Human Rights department. I see the opportunity of using these spaces to really amplify the issues of HIV and human rights. I also see opportunities for the activism of people living with HIV (PLHIV) and the networks of PLHIV who are at grassroots level. However, it is critical for those networks to be supported so they can grow strong. I also see opportunities in the other human rights groups who are now beginning to work closely with AIDS activists. Finally, there are many treaties on HIV and Human Rights that we need now to start using as guidelines more than ever instead of having those documents lie on the shelves.


Related Links:

Human Rights Watch news

UNAIDS expresses sadness over the death of staff member Sam Were

19 de septiembre de 2008

It is with profound sadness that UNAIDS mourns the death of staff member Mr Sam Were who recently passed away in Kampala, Uganda. Sam lived openly with HIV and served as a role model by declaring his HIV-positive status at a time when few people living with HIV were willing to disclose.

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