Adolescent girls want sex. But their risks of HIV infection and pregnancy remain high – Morenike Ukpong

Adolescent girls want sex. But their risks of HIV infection and pregnancy remain high – Morenike Ukpong

Adolescent girls who are already mothers

By Morenike Ukpong-Folayan

Adolescent girls keep rating the need to prevent pregnancy higher than the need to prevent HIV infection. Pregnancy outside marriage causes a lot of stigma in Nigeria. Pregnancy outside marriage is not welcome in most home in Northern, eastern and western Nigeria. Yet access to sexual and reproductive health commodities that will help prevent pregnancies are not easy to come by.

Despite the shame that comes with being pregnant, teen pregnancy is not a rarity. It is a growing problem for many communities, especially rural communities where procurement of abortion from professionals comes with lots of challenges.

Lots of girls who leave school are increasingly finding it difficult to be engaged productively due to low rates of admission into higher institutions, poor access to vocational training and low competency to start small-scale businesses.Being idle increases their risk of frolicking around with the opposite sex and engaging in sex.

A good number of adolescent girls enjoy having sex. They discover its pleasure and do not want to discontinue. They want a way to enjoy sex without becoming pregnant. Sadly, adolescents’ awareness about contraception options is poor.

For the few that are self-educated about possible contraception use, access to contraception is also poor. Health care workers are usually very unwilling to provide adolescents with contraception.

Many are often limited to the use of condom – a device that is dependent on the boy’s willingness to use the product and to use it correctly and consistently.The prevention of HIV infection is not a priority for many adolescent girls. HIV infection may well be hidden for many, many years. But pregnancy cannot be hidden.

The shame and consequences come rapidly – drop out from school, increased risk of not getting a suitor in the community,  further hardship for the girl and her family to name a few, and the stigma and shame the entire family has to face in the community.Yet the risk for HIV infection for adolescents who start having sex at a young age is high. She is likely to change sex partners multiple times, have challenges negotiating the use of condom, and risk selling sex to be able to have access to some needs in life.

Adolescent girls need easily accessible products that can help prevent or reduce the risk of pregnancy, sexually transmitted infection and HIV infection.  HIV prevention is as equally important as the prevention of unwanted adolescent pregnancies.The clear need for the development of technologies that will enhance the ability of adolescent girls to prevent pregnancy, HIV and sexually transmitted infection was highlighted very clearly by Pauline Irungu, the Policy and Advocacy Manager at PATH, during the Biomedical HIV Prevention Forum that held on the 3rd of December 2017 in Abidjan at part of the 2017 ICASA Conference.Pauline noted that 66% of global maternal deaths and 66% of the new HIV infections in 2015 occurred in sub-Saharan Africa.

While progress has been made in reducing mother to child transmission, much more remains to be done including the need to address the unmet need for contraception for 25% of women.Sadly, a growing number of young people aged 10–24years are living with HIV in the region. These young persons living with HIV have particular needs and challenges related to their sexual and reproductive health and rights.

STIGMATIZATION OF HIV POSITIVE CLIENTS BY HEALTH WORKERS – Amos Fortune 

STIGMATIZATION OF HIV POSITIVE CLIENTS BY HEALTH WORKERS – Amos Fortune 

A client diagnosed HIV positive through field testings by an outreach program visited the facility She was referred to the two nurses on duty. After initial pleasantries, the client sat down. The nurses started a round of conversation, kept peeping at the client and then bursted into laughter. The client got enraged, stood up, and left the facility.

 

Every lost HIV positive client reduces the chance of controlling the HIV epidemic. Every lost HIV positive client due to stigma (real or perceived) reduces the chances of having the individual return into care for prompt access to therapy that can improve the quality of life. Every lost HIV positive woman from health care services increases the risk for HIV transmission from mother to child during pregnancy. Every HIV positive client a health care provider losses has implications for the child, the community and the nation.

 

Health facilities is central the health and welfare of people living with HIV. Healthcare workers need to do things differently with people living with HIV. They need to be friendly to promote drug adherence. They need to respect confidentiality to be able to effectively care for their clients. They need to help clients breed trust in the healthcare system to be able to maximize the potentials of the services they can access.

 

Lets talk more about preventing stigma in health care spaces.

PRIVATE SECTOR STIGMATIZATION OF PLHIV – David Ekpenyong Ita

PRIVATE SECTOR STIGMATIZATION OF PLHIV – David Ekpenyong Ita

People loose their job employment opportunities because they live with the Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) especially in the private sector. People living with HIV complain. Although the anti-stigma law prohibits the loss of job opportunity because of one’s HIV status, people who loss their jobs are poorly motivated to seek re-dress because of the ineffective legal system and because individuals do not want to face further stigma from the public.

 

Stigma breeds injustice. Stigma also kills.

 

Stigma control will require more than policies and regulations. For Nigeria, it will require teaching a new culture that does not judge or stigmatise. The culture, language, norms and values normalizes stigma. What we see with stigmatization of people living with HIV is simply a reflection of the culture of stigma in Nigeria. Changes will happen when we are educated about how to do away with stigma from our formative years.

 

In the interim, institutions, organisations and employers who stigmatise should face stiff penalties meted out promptly. This should serve as deterrents to official discriminatory actions. We need advocates to serve as watchdogs and report offenders. When we have more cases addressed in the court of law, we may have less and less offenders.

THE NEED FOR HIV EDUCATION PROGRAMMES FOR THE RELIGIOUS  SECTOR IN NIGERIA –  David Ekpenyong Ita

THE NEED FOR HIV EDUCATION PROGRAMMES FOR THE RELIGIOUS  SECTOR IN NIGERIA – David Ekpenyong Ita

The need for members of religious organisations and bodies to be sensitized on HIV prevention and transmission should be given an urgent attention. Many Nigerians are sanctimoniously religious that discussing about Sexually Transmitted Infection (STI) and Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) prevention and Transmission  is not welcome. Yet, the religious organisations is home to many youths. These stance therefore deny teens and adolescents the opportunity to learn life transforming information about management of STI and HIV.

 

The association between HIV and sex increases the judgmental stance of many clerics  to HIV.  Yet, there are other routes for HIV infection – sharing of the same sharp objects with an infected person, use of unsterilized puncture equipment, and through delivery and breast feeding of babies born to mothers living with HIV who is not on antiretroviral treatment.

 

No sharing information cannot be protective. Sharing information empowers individuals to take informed action – including action to decrease the risk for HIV infection and STI. Receiving information in safe and trusted places like in religious home, increases the prospect for the education to produce behavior change.

 

Less and less adolescents are not abstaining from sex because they are not empowered with information on how to do so. Once sexually active, the dynamics change. Fear messages no longer inhibit sex. The constant information (inclusive of myths and misconceptions) about sex promulgated through the media, peers, drama, films and  songs makes it more likely for an adolescent to be sexually active than not. Clerics need to learn to manage adolescents as potentially sexually active; and so share information that enables them have safe sexual lives (delay or protect when abstinence is not the focus).

 

As advocates we can make changes. I discussed with a popular church pastor about the need to discuss HIV prevention with adolescent. I am drawing up my public education programme for the April 2018 youth programme at his request.  This includes ensuring access of adolescents to HIV testing. I will be working with a female laboratory scientist to conduct the programme. They will all have free access to HIV and malaria testing.

 

I am glad I spoke up. As an advocate for change, I need to speak up. As LeNNiB champions we need to speak up in churches and mosques to contribute to the HIV goal of 2030.

 

Thinking beyond the project: Making HIV prevention projects work sustainably in Nigeria – Morenike Folayan

Thinking beyond the project: Making HIV prevention projects work sustainably in Nigeria – Morenike Folayan

By Morenike Oluwatoyin Folayan

Nigeria has had multiple donor funded projects that can help improve the HIV control landscape in Nigeria. Nigeria is one of the biggest recipients of PEPFAR, the Global Fund and Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation grants for HIV control progammes in the world. Have these funded programmes made meaningful changes in the HIV control landscape in Nigeria?

I personally think these projects have made their impact. They have helped build human capacity for development, helped with infrastructural, systems and structure development, and have helped improve our sense of accountability. There are however gaps, the greatest of which I see is a problem of scaling up successful programmes and pushing for programme sustainability.

First, a number of programmes I have been engaged with directly or indirectly do not make active plans for sustainability.

An example is the HIV prevention programme targeting key populations in Nigeria midwived by the Society for Family Health and funded by USAID known as SHiPS for MARPS.

The multi-million dollar project was the first comprehensive HIV prevention programme for key populations in Nigeria. It was indeed well-funded.

It was however quiet clear from my perspective that the design and implementation of the programme was simply to meet the targets of the funders. The heart/desire/drive/motivation of the implementers to ensure sustainability was missing.

Right now, the project is ended with no evidence of country ownership of project or scale-up plans. Once again, this is my critical perspective of what could have been an excellent sustained project addressing the needs of key populations in Nigeria.

The passion for HIV prevention work seems to be a growing gap. HIV prevention programmes seems more or less like duties and work outputs and less so activities to effect change.

Work men and women simply follow the workplans and tick success when indicators for success are achieved. These approaches have helped achieve the results we see till date. However, if we get a lot more passionate about the work we do, we sure will see more impact – scale up and sustainability of programmes. We will likely see more push for government investment in the HIV response.

Passion for HIV prevention work can best be harnessed through engagement of the civil society. Here is where you find passionate people working for change.

Sadly, a growing phenomenon observed in the civil society space is the concept known as CSO-contractors. These are civil society organisations (community-based organisations) set up simply to mop up contract jobs from the multinational non-governmental organisations who contract grassroot work to community based organistions.

These CSO-contractors are so skilled at getting these jobs that the community based organistions run by passionate advocates are staved of work and funds. Advocates are therefore leaving the field to man other things that can bring food to their tables.

This evolution in the field of HIV prevention has significant implications for the field in Nigeria when the donor funds dry up. It is already drying up. Without passionate actors working in the field of HIV prevention, it is clear we will lose the gains we have made thus far as the CSO-contractors will leave the field creating the gap that will undermine our seemingly gained successes.

Support for passionate advocates to work in the field of HIV prevention is needed. Engaging community based organistions run by passionate advocates to be involved with grassroot programming for HIV prevention projects will increase the risk for ensuring programme sustainability as they can do more advocacy and activism work to help institutionalize programmes and projects where they work. Hope we have reading hears.

Folayan is Co-Coordinator of New HIV Vaccine and Microbicide Advocacy Society (NHVMAS) Nigeria.