Leaving No Nigerian Behind (LeNNiB) Champions Mentorship Program Application

OVERVIEW

New HIV Vaccine and Microbicide Advocacy Society (NHVMAS) is happy to announce the Call for Applications for the 2018 batch of the Leaving No Nigerian Behind (LeNNiB) Champions Mentorship Programme. The LeNNiBprogramme is a community centered advocacy programme that is focused on empowering young people through trainings and mentorship, to make significant changes in their various communities and environment while addressing the HIV prevention needs of community members.

The LeNNiB Champions project is a NHVMAS HIV Prevention Academy bridging project that helps individual advocates and organizations to learn how to include HIV prevention advocacy into planned and ongoing programs that are important but not exclusively focused on HIV control.

OBJECTIVE

To empower community organizations to facilitate HIV prevention research advocacy through structural interventions. The Champions should envision making HIV prevention research advocacy an integral component of all development work in Nigeria.

All applicants must:

  • Must be between be between the age of 19-30years
  • Must be a staff or affiliated of a non-profit/community based organization
  • Must have good written, verbal and interpersonal communication skills.
  • Reside in Lagos State

During the programme all learners will:

  • Undertake a structured face-to-face training programme twice a week
  • Receive formal supports from mentors and peers to implement a specific project.
  • Participate in the Good Participatory Practice (GPP) course organised by AVAC

While NHVMAS shall recruit interested young persons into this formal programme, its focus shall be on building institution and organizational capacity to integrate and implement HIV prevention research advocacy at local (State) and national levels. The expected outcome is that there would be increased public education and awareness on biomedical HIV prevention research in the communities where LeNNiB champions would be working.

  1. Applicants should submit the following:
  2.  The filled application questions
  3.  A letter of support from supervisor
  4. Most up-to-date resume/CV

All completed applications should be emailed to tosinba2000@gmail.com with the subject “LeNNiB champions Application” no later than November 30th, 2018.

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What has HIV got to do with contraception? Dr. Morenike Ukpong

 
I know that women are at increased risk for HIV infection in Nigeria. I also know that there are lots of efforts to prevent unwanted pregnancy irrespective of HIV status. Birth control is critical to population control and national development. Unintended pregnancy is also a common threat to the well-being and lives of women and girls. Many governments in developing countries, including Nigeria, are embracing birth control programmes including those that increase access of girls and women to short and long term contraception. Many of these same countries that have high fertility rates like Nigeria, are also battling with large populations of persons living with HIV.  But then, what is this thing about HIV and contraception use.
In 2017, the World Health Organization issued a public statement about of progestogen-only injectables such as Depo Provera (s for protection from getting pregnant for the next three months) and norethisterone enanthate [NET-EN] following a meeting convened in December 2016 to look at the evidence on the possibility of increasing HIV risk following the use of hormonal contraception. WHO recognized this as a critical one, particularly for sub-Saharan Africa, where women have a high lifetime risk of acquiring HIV, and hormonal contraceptives constitute a significant component of the contraceptive method mix.
The statement identified that there is a risk for HIV acquisition through the use of progestogen-only injectables (norethisterone enanthate [NET-EN] and depot medroxyprogesterone acetate [DMPA, intramuscular or subcutaneous]) for women at high risk of acquiring HIV. However, the advantages of using these methods to prevent unwanted pregnancies generally outweigh the possible increased risk of HIV acquisition.
There is currently no clinical trial derived evidence to show that any contraception, including progestogen-only injectables, increase the risk of acquiring HIV infections. However, multiple low to moderate evidence generated through secondary analysis of data collected for other research purposes but analysed to test possible associations between risk of HIV infection and use of contraception suggest that this association is plausible.  The ongoing ECHOO study being implemented in South Africa will provide some evidence by 2019 on whether DMPA use increases a woman’s HIV risk or not.
Women needs to be educated about the choices they make about use of contraception. The following hormonal contraceptive methods can be used without restriction: combined oral contraceptive pills (COCs), combined injectable contraceptives (CICs), combined contraceptive patches and rings, progestogen-only pills (POPs), and levonorgestrel (LNG) and etonogestrel (ETG) implants as they are safe for use by anyone. Intrauterine devices (IUDs; levonorgestrel [LNG] and copper) are not associated with an increased risk for HIV acquisition also.
For women living with HIV, it is important to discuss contraceptive options also. Most anti-retroviral treatments do not interact with family planning drugs. Some family planning implants contain a hormone called etonogestrol that interacts with an ART called efavirenz.  If you are living with HIV, it is wise to talk with your doctor or clinic about your family planning method. You can ask if there is any risk of your method interacting with your ART.
 
To keep track on information about HIV and hormonal contraception, join the HC-HIV advocates’ listserv. Write to Margaret Happy (mhappy@icwea.org) for listing on the listserv.
 
 
 
Keep up with our activities on NHVMAS’ social media platforms and join the conversation!
Twitter: @nhv_mas

Let’s speak up for adolescents’ sexual and reproductive health and right – Dr. Morenike Ukpong

 

I met Bisi (not real name) during one of my process evaluation trips.  Bisi had come to one of the adolescent health clinics set up by the A360 project in Nigeria to facilitate access of adolescent females to sexual and reproductive health services including contraception. Bisi knows she is sexually active. She should be sexually active because she is married with a child. She and her husband had decided to space their children and so she had accessed the clinic and taken up a contraceptive method of her choice.

For some reason, her mother-in-law learnt she had taken up a method. Bisi received the worst abuse I can personally imagine. She was shown around in the public to passer-byes, neighbours and those who care to listen as a promiscuous girl who had gone to access contraception. Her husband who was around could not save her from the shame and torture his mother made her face. They were both young persons and still living with and being cared by the woman.

As young persons who had fallen in love and had started having sex, they both took the decision to marry when Bisi became pregnant. They had little income. The mother-in-law took the couple in and continued to provide financial support to husband, wife and child. Bisi had no job so she was financially dependent on both husband and mother-in-law.

The story of Bisi is replicated in many communities in Nigeria. Many adolescents are sexually active. Sadly, many cannot access sexual and reproductive health services because parents, health care providers and community members who are aware of this fact, simply choose to turn a blind eye to the need of this population.

Adolescents are getting sexually matured much earlier. The social media promotes sexual relationships. Peer pressures make adolescents commence sexual relationships as many who do not have sex partners are the mocked and taunted by peers.

Many do not want to get pregnant. They understand the implications of unwanted pregnancies. Yet the allure of having sexual relationships – being ‘in’ with peers, access to financial support from boyfriends, enjoying sex – makes them face making the choice between the devil and the deep blue sea. Almost all of them choose sex and defer to myths and misconceptions to prevent pregnancies: jump several times after sex; drink bitter lemon with lots of salt after sex. For those that get pregnant, there are lots of remedies resorted to abort the pregnancies.  Abortion comes with several complications.

The A360 project in Nigeria – implemented by Society for Family Health and funded by Bill and Melinda Gates foundation and State Government – plans to facilitate access of sexually active adolescents 15-19 years to modern contraception. The programme will however, not succeed without parental and community support.

The problems are huge. We however need to start somewhere to address the sexual and reproductive health crisis many adolescents and young persons in Nigeria face one of which is poor access to contraception.

Bisi’s story would have been different if she had had access to contraception. As a sexually active adolescent, she could have prevented the first pregnancy, continued with her educational programme, and delayed her marriage till when she could be finally independent enough to support her family. We need parents and communities to support sexually active adolescents’ access to contraception.

 

 

Valedictorian Speech- Aisha Gambari

The pioneer set of LeNNiB champions under the NHVMAS HIV prevention academy 2017, you deserve respect and admiration. You have clearly succeeded – even excelled – in this exceptionally dynamic and demanding training environment. As I look out from this podium, I know that for decades to come, we will save lives, provide shoulders to lean on, and build on what we have learned and accomplished here.

But we don’t need a reminder. We are already far better prepared than most. And we now belong to a very elite group that has the tools and training to improve the lives of so many…whether it is through research or public service. What we do will matter.

So on behalf of those whose lives we have already touched with our sensitization, awareness and research skills – and will touch in the years ahead – I say: Thank you for working so hard – and preparing so well!

And now I’d like to suggest that we also say a very big thank you to NHVMAS (can we all rise and take a bow)

We would also like to thank our families and friends who have stood by us. You have supported us. And today, you share our joy, excitement and pride.

We would also like to say a thank you to all our facilitators, – the staff of NHVMAS and all the sponsors who put so much time, resources and effort into teaching us, guiding us, inspiring us, and sometimes prodding us, particularly the ever-supportive, capable and detailed Dr Morenike. (Request for an applause for her)

And let’s thank ourselves too – because we never would have reached this auspicious day without the friendship, support, and collaboration of us all.

HIV/AIDS EPIDEMIC: we had been told that with the advent of antibiotics and vaccines, medicine was on the verge of ending the era of infectious diseases. How wrong that was. Soon cases of a mysterious immune deficiency syndrome began to present. No one knew what caused it. No one knew how to care for it. No one even knew what to call it. But it was AIDS.

NHVMAS has given us the opportunity to tackle HIV and AIDS epidemic. We appreciate the importance of research and global health. It opened our eyes to the need for strategic thinking – and an integrated HIV prevention strategies. It also opened our eyes to the fact that some of the greatest challenges in HIV prevention exist at the interface of a broader set of social, ethical, political and legal concerns.

NHVMAS propelled us into the world of HIV/ AIDS and health policy. And yes, this terrible disease opened our eyes, but it also opened a door – the unexpected opportunity to become one of the beneficiaries of NHVMAS HIV prevention academy as LeNNiB champions.

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