Vulnerable women and girls will benefit from a HIV Vaccine

By Hajia Jamila Ibrahim – Yahaya (LDM Fellow)

I am a Counselling and Social Development Consultant, the Society for Women and AIDS in Africa, Nigerian Chapter (SWAAN), and author of the book, “When the Sexually Abused Child Demands Fair Hearing”. The book is the outcome of a study funded by Development Research And Project Centre (DRPC) and MacArthur Foundation in 2017 for a project, Partnership To Strengthen Innovations And Practice In Secondary Education (PSIPSE).

The study found out that the vulnerability of the out-of-school girl child to sexual abuse and HIV deserves better attention than it receives now.

I congratulate NHVMAS on this initiative of Festival of Blogs to amplify voices on their interest in HIV vaccine development to promote continued investment in HIV vaccine research.

Nigerian women and girls are no doubt among the key affected population for HIV and AIDS due to their very high vulnerability to HIV resulting from community level risks and individual level risks. Their vulnerability is independent of their socio-cultural or socioeconomic environment: they are at risk in all socio-cultural or socioeconomic context.

Some of the very vulnerable women and girls include the out-of-school girls; women and girls in incarceration and Internally Displaced Persons camps; women and girls with physical and mental challenges; juvenile delinquent children abusing drug and indulging in sex; teenage sex workers, trafficked women and girls or and sex slaves; and women and girls living with HIV that have not been reached.

All these categories of women and girls are vulnerable to HIV and would benefit immensely from research that helps develop an effective and cheap HIV VACCINE that can be accessible to everyone. There should be no barriers to access.