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U N I T E D N A T I O N S

Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs

Integrated Regional Information Network

[These reports do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]

CONTENT:

1 - ZIMBABWE: Rural dwellers shun VCT centres

1 - ZIMBABWE: Rural dwellers shun VCT centres

HARARE, 20 October (PLUSNEWS) - Few rural Zimbabweans are using the

Voluntary Counselling and Testing (VCT) centres, according to the latest

Zimbabwe Human Development Report.

The US-based NGO, Pact, recorded only 50 to 108 visitors a month at two of

its VCT centres located at the Regina Coelli Mission in Manicaland

province and the St Theresa's Mission in Masvingo province.

" To go for testing takes courage - a person's perception of their risk to

exposure is what drives them. If we get 100 in one month, that's great, "

Choice Makufa, director of Pact told PlusNews.

Pact's VCT centres are located at mission hospitals because " faith-based

organisations reach out to the most vulnerable people, who feel

comfortable with them, " said Mafuka. To attract more visitors to the

centre, the NGO also offers Prevention of Parent to Child Transmission

(PPCT) treatment, access to home-based care, treatment of opportunistic

infections and links to services such as birth registration and writing a

will.

The Zimbabwe Association of Church Hospitals uses a similar approach at

its 10 rural centres, as does the government at its rural district

hospitals.

But getting people interested in the programme requires a great deal of

community mobilisation by trained volunteers, Makufa explained. Emedie

Gunduza, an advocacy officer of the Women and AIDS Support Network, said

at some of the mobile PPCT points outside the capital, Harare, people came

forward in large numbers if food baskets were on offer but, generally,

were not keen on testing " for the sake of it " .

VCT uptake in the urban areas was more impressive. Condom manufacturer

Population Services International (PSI), which runs 20 VCTs or New Start

Centres located mostly in the towns, showed that their larger centres

attracted 2,000 to 3,600 visitors per month, while smaller centres

attracted 100 to 800.

Karin Hartzold, PSI's HIV/AIDS advisor, said advertising, promotions and

sponsorship of a popular television show centred on testing and living

positively with the virus had helped to popularise the VCT programme.

However, only 32 percent of the population lives in urban areas, where

people are better informed about HIV issues. The Human Development Report

of 2003 said the border, mining and commercial farming areas, where

prevalence was known to be highest, remained neglected.

NGOs working in the field of HIV/AIDS believe Zimbabwe's fledgling

antiretroviral (ARV) rollout programme could increase VCT uptake

considerably if the centres were made an entry point for access, and if

the availability of treatment was speeded up. Currently, free ARVs are

available only to the very sick at a few urban government hospitals.

[ENDS]

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Copyright © UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs 2004

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