Tag:
HIV / AIDS
A leading humanitarian agency has
today warned that the world's biggest conference on HIV and AIDS will miss
the mark unless attendees come away making firm commitments to end
mother-to-child transmission of the disease, increase access to pediatric
treatment and extend care for affected children.
World Vision, a Christian relief and development organization with HIV
and AIDS programs in more than 60 countries, says participants in the XVII
International AIDS Conference (IAC) in Mexico City should put children at
the focus of their discussions. Fifteen million children have been orphaned
by the pandemic, and thousands are infected each week while treatment and
care lag that of adults.
"This is a top forum for hearing important new scientific research and
for productive, structured dialogue on the major challenges facing the
global response to AIDS," said Martha Newsome, director of World Vision's
HIV and AIDS Hope Initiative. "However, as is often the case with global
conferences like this one, the needs of children are too low on the agenda.
"Almost 1,200 children a day under the age of 15 are newly infected
with HIV - around 90 percent of those from mother-to-child transmission,
which is preventable. Organizers expect 22,000 people to attend this
conference, from field workers to government ministers. Imagine if each of
those made reducing mother-to-child transmission of HIV their personal
goal?
"As a global community we should be ashamed that 9 out of every 10 HIV
positive children get the virus from their mothers during
Pregnancy,
childbirth or breastfeeding, a particular tragedy because mother-child
transmission can be safely stopped. Prevention services can reduce
transmission risk to less than 2%, but only about 1 in 10 HIV-positive
pregnant women who need ARVs get them. There's no acceptable reason to not
put an end to mother-to-child transmission."
ARVs, or anti-retroviral drugs, are the medications needed by
HIV-positive people to delay the onset of AIDS and significantly prolong
life.
Specifically, World Vision is calling for health and government leaders
to:
-- Prevent mother-to-child transmission by fully scaling up programs and
being accountable for meeting goals
-- Ensure pediatric treatment and infant testing
-- Earmark 12% of AIDS funding for children affected by HIV and AIDS
The IAC's slogan this year is "Universal Access Now," emphasizing the
need for continued urgency in the worldwide response to HIV/AIDS, and for
action on the part of all stakeholders.
"Without addressing the needs of children impacted by HIV and AIDS, and
of those infected by mother-child transmission specifically, the IAC will
sadly prove to be just another expensive talking shop to the millions who
need action now," Newsome said.
World Vision is a Christian humanitarian organization dedicated to
working with children, families and their communities worldwide to reach
their full potential by tackling the causes of poverty and injustice. We
serve all people, regardless of religion, race, ethnicity or gender. For
more information, please visit http://www.worldvision.org.
World Vision's AIDS programmes are in 60+ nations, many in sub-Saharan
Africa, where more than 90% of the world's HIV-infected children live.
Partnering with local communities and faith leaders, it works to educate
about the disease, to eradicate stigma, encourage voluntary testing, train
thousands of home visitors and provide care and assistance to thousands of
chronically ill men, women and children.
World Vision U.S.
http://www.worldvision.org
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