GENDER BASED VIOLENCE AMONG VULNERABLE PERSONS – Zedomi Mathew

GENDER BASED VIOLENCE AMONG VULNERABLE PERSONS – Zedomi Mathew

According to UNFPA (united nations for population fund activities) Gender-based violence is an umbrella term for any harmful act that is perpetrated against a person’s will and that is based on socially ascribed differences between males and females. It includes acts that inflict physical, sexual or mental harm or suffering, threats of such acts, coercion, and other deprivations of liberty. Gender based violence is violence that is directed against a person on the basis of their gender.

Notably, Gender and Sex are often times used interchangeably due to their context similarities, yet this concept are very different.
Gender refers to the socially constructed roles, behaviors, activities, and attributes that a given society considers appropriate for men women.
Sex is the biological and physical attributes that differentiates being a man or woman i.e. A woman has a womb, a man doesn’t. A woman can breastfeed, a man cannot.

Forms of gender based violence

Sexual Harassment: any repetitive, unwanted and uninvited sexual attention such as taunting or teasing.
Sexual Assault: sexual assault is any unwanted sexual act or behavior which is threatening, violent, forced or coercive and to which a person has not given consent or was not able to give consent.
Domestic violence: Willful intimidation, physical assault, battery, sexual assault, and other abusive behaviors as part of a systematic pattern or power and control perpetrated by one intimate partner against another.
Intimate partner violence: describes physical violence, sexual violence, stalking and psychological aggression (including coercive acts) by a current or former intimate partner.
Rape: Another word used for sexual assault. It is any unwanted sexual act or behavior, which a person did not consent to or was not able to consent to.
Date rape: happens when someone you have just met or are going out with forces or manipulated you into having unwanted sexual contact, date rape can involve forced sexual acts or subtle or threatening sexual behavior. Regardless of your relationship, sexual contact without consent is against the law.
Defilement: sexual assault on a minor i.e. 6month old baby being defiled by an adult .
Female genital mutilation: All procedures that involve partial of total removal of the external female genitala, or other injury to the female genital organs for non medical reasons.
Forced marriage: young girls less than 18 years in some communities being forced into marriage.

Group of people that are considered vulnerable
Women, Female sex workers, Men who have sex with men, People living with HIV, People who inject drugs, Young adolescent girls, People in correctional centre etc. This aforementioned group of people are at higher risks of experiencing Gender Based violence due to their level of vulnerability.

Providing GBV care, treatment and referral
The person first has to be referred to a proper health facility for post GBV care services and SRH services ( sexual and reproductive health).

Offer HTS, pEP ( if within 72 hours of sexual assault) for rape clients
Prevent STIs or pregnancy with prophylactic treatment if possible.
Conduct initial psychosocial support for traumatized persons.
Perform physical examination and injury identification.
Document report of abuse.
Provide legal aids for GBV victim.
Provide shelter for victims.

COMBINATION PREVENTION APPROACH TO HIV: A RESPONSE AT THE RIGHT TIME – EDET IMOH JAMES

COMBINATION PREVENTION APPROACH TO HIV: A RESPONSE AT THE RIGHT TIME – EDET IMOH JAMES

For over four decades, eliminating the AIDS pandemic has been a global concern. Governments, as well as private and public agencies have all joined hands to achieve this goal. This led to-amongst others- the promulgation of the Combination Prevention Approach. Basically, combination prevention programmes engages affected communities, government and ministries, and other stakeholders and sectors in analyzing their local risk factors, underlying causes of vulnerability, and in building a common sense of purpose and mutual accountability for preventing new HIV infections.
Key features of the combination approach include:
(1) They are carefully tailored to national and local needs and conditions- i.e. they are based on current information on the modes of transmission, the populations or groups most at risk of exposure and transmission, and the context that shape their .risk and vulnerability.
(2) They include the strategic mix of structural as well as biomedical and behavioral approaches that are required to meet the needs of those groups, focusing both on their immediate risks and underlying causes of vulnerability. Through structural interventions they create a more enabling environment for prevention action.
(3) They are planned to operate synergistically and consistently over time, on the multiple levels that reinforce or challenge risk behaviour.
(4) They prioritize investments strategically and with the full engagement of affected communities, mobilizing resources in the community, the private sector, government and internationally to achieve needed participation, coverage and continuity.
(5) They require, benefit from, and invest in enhanced partnership and coordination in the design, resourcing and management of programmes, with special attention to investment in decentralized and community responses.
(6) They incorporate sufficient flexibility to permit ongoing assessment, improvement of strategies, and use of new tools and approaches to enable strategies to evolve in response to epidemiological, technological, or social changes.
In Nigeria, the Combination Prevention Approach takes the form of MPPI (Minimum Prevention Package Intervention) which entails the strategic, simultaneous use of different classes of prevention activities (structural, behavioral and biomedical), that operate on multiple levels (individual, community and societal) to respond to the specific needs of particular audiences through engagement of the affected communities.
The Combination Prevention Approach is premised on the philosophy that no single HIV prevention strategy can on its own combat the epidemic. Thus, it is crucial to implement packages that offer a mix of credible high-impact HIV prevention interventions. They include condom provision, Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP), Anti-Retroviral Therapy (ART), voluntary medical male circumcision for men, as well as other services for general and key populations. Additionally, people who inject drugs (PWIDs) require additional tools such as harm reduction (needle-syringe and opioid substitution therapy programmes) for effective HIV (and other STIs) prevention.
Combination Prevention aims at sustaining positive impact .ie. reducing the rates of new HIV infections and transmissions in the long-term. It advocates for an integrated approach whereby HIV prevention is not positioned in a single intervention but embraces the coeval use of harmonizing behavioral, biomedical, and structural prevention strategies.
Combination Prevention relies on evidence-informed, strategic, and simultaneous use of complementary behavioral, biomedical and structural prevention strategies.
Combination Prevention Approach takes into account unique behavioral, biomedical, structural, economic, political, legal, social, cultural and other factors of each setting, be it individually, community or society. In Nigeria, several of these factors serve as barriers to the successful implementation of Combination Prevention Approach. For example, poverty and income equality-which falls under the economic factor- could impede one from accessing life saving HIV services. Also, Stigma, low awareness of human rights as well as harmful cultural practices are current challenges to effective implementation of MPPI. Thus, for an effective Combination Prevention Program to take place, these barriers need to be addressed.
In virtually every country were marked progress in preventing new infections have been documented, a combination of structural, behavioral, and biomedical prevention approach has been used. Thus, it is not an exaggeration to state that the Combination Prevention Approach is indeed a response at the right time.

PWID AND HIV: A SILENT CRY FOR HELP – EDET IMOH JAMES

PWID AND HIV: A SILENT CRY FOR HELP – EDET IMOH JAMES

People Who Inject Drugs (PWIDs) are estimated to constitute about 80,000 in the Nigerian territory. In 2017, HIV prevalence amongst PWIDs was 3.4%, with women being particularly affected.
Harm reduction services such as opioid substitution therapy and clean needle exchange are currently not available in Nigeria. Available services are limited to targeted information, advocation and communication, condom distribution, and Hepatitis C treatment. However, discussions on developing a national harm reduction strategy began in 2015.
People who inject drugs are among the groups most vulnerable to HIV infection. This is due to sharing of unsterilized needles, criminalization (punitive laws) and marginalization, poverty, imprisonment and detentions, and new drugs (ATS, Hagigat, IPEDS etc).
Different strategies could be implemented to help reduce the rate of HIV transmission amongst PWIDs. These include widely effected harm reduction measures to ensure access to social and psychological support needed to overcome the drug addiction, drug treatment and other health services, alongside clean needles. Stigma and discrimination, as well as punitive laws should also be invalidated to enable PWIDs access treatment without fear, as well as lessen their chances of being exposed to and transmitting HIV.
To achieve the universal goal to end AIDS by 2030, governmental as well as private bodies should formulate measures tailored to the PWID community, with the aim of helping them adopt a positive culture fostered towards preventing the transmission of HIV and other infections.

BEHAVIORAL INTERVENTIONS: A PANACEA TO A GLOBAL CRISES – EDET IMOH JAMES

BEHAVIORAL INTERVENTIONS: A PANACEA TO A GLOBAL CRISES – EDET IMOH JAMES

I am sure many people would be wondering what behaviour has to do with HIV. Sit back, relax, and crunch your chin-chin (or groundnut) while I take you on this interesting ride.
You see, at the onset of the AIDS pandemic, a lot was not going we’ll. Death rates were high, and the future looked very forlorn. This period could be compared to the Biblical deluge, and indeed many believed that it was a divine punishment for humanity’s wrongs. Even persons were hitherto believed to be in the most faithful of relationships succumbed to the virus. The world grappled with a pandemic that seemed immutable.
By the early 1990’s, however, HIV prevention programmes were established and these were primarily tailored towards preventing the transmission of HIV by means of behavior change. Prominent amongst these was the ABC (Abstinence, Be Faithful, Use A Condom) approach which was predicated on a combination of risk avoidance and harm reduction. This strategy provided a balance between abstinence-only education and comprehensive sex education. The ABC response was formulated in response to the high rates of HIV/AIDS in Africa as well as to prevent the spread of other STD’s.
However, by the mid-2000s, it became visible that this approach was not sufficient alone to curb the spread of the virus. Effective HIV prevention should reckon with underlying sociocultural, economic, political, legal and other contextual factors. Thus, it was apparent that no single intervention could on its own eliminate the AIDS pandemic.
This led to the formation of the combination prevention approach, which is defined by UNAIDS as rights-based, evidence informed, and community-owned programs that use a mix of biomedical, behavioral, and structural interventions, prioritized to meet the current HIV prevention needs of particular individuals and communities, so as to have the greatest sustained impact on reducing new infections. Combination prevention connotes strategically selected interventions that matches the needs of a given country or community and is delivered at the scale needed to make an impact. It means doing less of something and far more of others. It means making tough decisions and measuring impact. Above all, it means moving with clarity and speed.

One of the branches of combination prevention is behavioral intervention. This implies strategies put in place with the aim of promoting behavior change in individuals, thus reducing their vulnerability to becoming infected, or infecting others. Behavioral strategies aim to reduce the risk of HIV transmission by addressing risky behaviors that could predispose an individual towards contracting the virus. As such, behavior change communication forms a basic component of combination prevention.

Effective behavior interventions address the cultural contexts within which risk behaviors occur, and aim to stimulate uptake of HIV prevention services. These programs often feature intensive approaches involving a combination of activities to address multiple outcomes, including knowledge, risk perception, norms, skills, sexual behaviors, and HIV service demand.

A behavioral intervention may aim to reduce the number of sexual partners individuals have, improve treatment adherence among people living with HIV, increase acceptability and demand for biomedical interventions. It also builds self-acceptance and emotional well-being.
Examples of behavioral interventions include:
(1) Sex Education
(2) Counseling and other forms of psychosocial support
(3) Safe infant feeding guidelines
(4) Stigma and discrimination reduction programmes
(5) Outreaches
(6) Peer education
(7) Condom and Lubricant programming.
There is no doubt that behavioral intervention is a viable weapon in the fight against HIV, and to ensure its victory, always have it at the back of your mind that change begins with you!!!

SAFETY OF TRANSGENDER PERSONS

Transgender and gender non-conforming people may experience harassment or discrimination from people who are scared or uncomfortable with these identities.
Being transgender is strongly associated with stigma and discrimination .Transgenders also lack access to tailored HIV prevention. Transgender person’s are very vulnerable persons and always at risk because of their sexuality and the community has not accepted us, that is also part of the reason we are always facing discrimination from families, friends and colleagues.
Transgender person’s safety should matter a lot to the community, because being a transgender person does mean there should not do what another people are doing or being deprived of basic amenities e.g quality healthcare services, human and legal rights, protection/security and freedom. The challenges, violence, discrimination and stigma trans person’s face are as a result of the society/community not knowing about them, their existence and who they really are. As a saying goes, people are always afraid of the unknown. To solve this we need to break this barriers

WHO IS A TRANSGENDER?
A transgender is a person whose sex at birth is different from his/her sexual orientation.
So we have different categories of trans person’s e.g trans man and trans woman.
A trans man is a person born as a female but whose sexual orientation is of a man and a trans woman is a person born as a man but whose sexual orientation is of a woman.

There has been many misconception over the time between transgenders and MSM as many draw comparism between them but mind in this case they are very different people.

MSM: Msm’s are Men who have sex with men. In the case of MSM they still see themselves as male but have affections for other men while some MSM are also bi-sexual, meaning they have sex with both male and female. In the transgender community however, people see themselves differently from their assigned sex at birth and have a different sexual orientation of themselves.

SOLUTIONS FOR THE SAFETY OF TRANS’S PERSONS
Earlier we talked about the safety of tran’s person and factors affecting their safety ranging from discrimination, violence, stigma, the law and ignorance of their existence, If all these challenges can be addressed, I believe all trans person’s can truly be safe and free while they use their God given talents and ideas for the positive development of the society/community they live in. Presently, the SSMPA law in Nigeria which is criminalizing the LGBTQI community, trans person can only be safe by international and local Ngo’s providing funds for safe houses, skill-workshop/entrepreneurship, human and legal rights advocacy and services and provision of proper healthcare services. We can truly be safe if the SSMPA law criminalizing the LGBTQI community is addressed or changed

Composed By;

Oluwaremilekun Sosan (A.K.A Rihanna of Lagos)