The Chief Executive Officer,

Society for Family Health

Nigeria.

Preparing for Expanded PrEP access in Communities in Nigeria (PEPIC-N): The Prospect for key populations

The New HIV Vaccine and Microbicides Advocacy Society and its partners  recently launched a campaign focused on ensuring no Nigerian is left behind in the HIV response through its Leaving No Nigerian Behind (LeNNiB) campaign. As part of its campaign the team is also launching a project titled Preparing for Expanded PrEP access in Communities in Nigeria (PEPIC-N).

For the PEPIC-N project, we would like to see that communities at substantial risk for HIV infection in Nigeria have access to comprehensive HIV prevention tools to help reduce the risk for HIV infection. This include continued access to quarterly HIV testing, access to risk reduction counseling, prompt diagnosis and treatment of STIs, uninterrupted access to condoms and lubricants and immediate access to antiretroviral therapy.

Our current campaign through the PEPIC-N project is to facilitate the access of populations at substantial risk of HIV infection with whom your organization works – key populations and adolescents – to existing HIV prevention tools. We also will want you to become accountable to your populations to facilitate their access to PrEP.

We want to believe your organization works in an ethical manner. This should imply that the population and people you work with are not means to an end but end in themselves. If this is an ethical ethos of your work, we would expect the Society for Family Health, Nigeria to raise its voice and work towards facilitating access of your target population to PrEP – a proven HIV intervention that reduces the risk of those at substantial risk to HIV infection –

As a group we DEMAND that over the next four years, Society for Family Health Nigeria provides evidence to show clearly:

  1. A decline in the HIV incidence in the population they work with in Nigeria
  2. Demonstrate that the organization reached 90-90-90 for the population they work with in Nigeria by 2020
  3. Evidence of zero new infection in the population they work with in Nigeria by 2030

Please note that collectively, we as a body of community advocates state that:

  • We DEMAND that Society for Family Health demonstrates its commitment to the life and welfare of MSM, FSW and PWID in Nigeria
  • We DEMAND that the Society for Family Health speak up on the need for PrEP for MSM and FSW in Nigeria
  • We DEMAND that Society for Family Health be accountable to its mandates in Nigeria in respect to key population by making public its annual targets and report periodically to the public on how well it is meeting its targets.
  • We DEMAND for positive change in the way the Society for Family Health manages the HIV response as it affects key populations in Nigeria
  • We DEMAND that the Society for Family Health conducts research that will help with policy development and programming for PrEP access by MSM and FSW that you serve in Nigeria
  • We DEMAND that the Society for Family Health integrates new biomedical HIV research literacy into its ongoing behavioural change communications with key populations in Nigeria

NHVMAS and her partners duly recognise the Society for Family Health’s leadership and the significant roles played in the Nigeria HIV response for the children and adolescents. We do not doubt the sincerity in your efforts to see Nigeria is not left behind. However, we as community actors DEMAND that you do more so that no Nigerian is left behind in race for zero prevent new HIV infections by 2030.