Guest guest Posted November 21, 2001 Report Share Posted November 21, 2001 FEARS IN THE DARK The Telegraph 21 November, 2001 New Delhi. The incredible history of a young female pavementdweller in Clacutta brings out how difficult and complicated sexual health work still is in West Bengal. Female powerlessness, sexual violence, brutal ignorance regarding HIV/AIDS, and the backwardness of government hospitals are some of the factors that non-governmental organizations working on sexual health have to confront in the state. Gang-raped in Bihar when eighteen, this girl was brought back, pregnant, to Calcutta by her family, where she tested HIV positive in a government hospital. Her child died, and her family married her off, but without informing her husband's family of her medical or sexual history. She conceived again, but by that time her husband and in-laws had come to know of her HIV positive status, and of her having been raped. She was thrown out of their home, only to be diagnosed HIV negative when taken for tests to the school of Tropical Medicine by an NGO. The earlier result was obviously wrong, but the damage had been done. She was disowned by her own and her husband's families, and now fends for herself and for her child by working as a domestic help. She still finds it difficult to convince people-including most of the nurses and doctors in the government hospitals who have refused to treat her-that she is not a health hazard. The stigma of rape on a woman is not a new thing in a society luridly fixated on female chastity. This woman bears the additional burden of a benighted fear of HIV/AIDS, not only among ordinary people, but also within the medical, paramedical and nursing professions. This breeds fear as well as secretiveness. Larger ethical questions of privacy, confidentiality and the obligatory disclosure of medical history, by individuals and by hospitals, are also relevant here. But the combination of medical progress, human rights vigilance, legal reform and social awareness-raising becomes particularly difficult to achieve when sexual and medical taboos remain frozen within a medieval witch-hunt mentality. And this is just as true within the family and the larger community, as within such public institutions as the state healthcare system. This is where the governmental sexual health projects remain clueless, apathetic and ineffectual, leaving it almost entirely to beleaguered NGOs to do the bulk of the real work. ********************************************* Jagdish Harsh ( jharsh@... ) François-Xavier Bagnoud (INDIA) ( www.fxb.org ) ___________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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