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Your daily Selection of IRIN Africa PlusNews reports, 8/17/2005

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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 (IRIN) - 1995-2005 ten years serving the

humanitarian community

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

CONTENT:

1 - GHANA: AIDS treatment on rise, but stigma still around

1 - GHANA: AIDS treatment on rise, but stigma still around

ACCRA, 17 August (PLUSNEWS) - With anti-AIDS drugs becoming widely available in

Ghana, thousands of HIV-positive people are living longer, healthier lives but

health workers say they continue to hide their status, frightened of rejection

by friends, family and colleagues.

The government began heavily subsidising antiretroviral (ARV) treatment for

people living with HIV/AIDS after receiving a US $15 million grant from the

Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria in 2004. This year another

US $6 million from the national purse was added.

Some 2,600 Ghanaians are now receiving the life-prolonging medication.

" Treatment is so readily available, unlike what pertained a few years ago -

people who were on the verge of death are now looking healthy and going about

their everyday duties, " Pwadura, an official at Ghana's AIDS Commission,

told PlusNews.

Although more people were receiving ARVs than ever before, it was still

difficult to get a job and a place to live; even retaining relations with

friends and family was not easy, according to Kakra Ankobiah, programme director

of the West African AIDS Foundation (WAAF).

The WAAF operates a hospice specialising in HIV/AIDS treatment and care, and

also runs outreach programmes in the capital, Accra.

" More people are alive today - thanks to ARVs - but no one wants to employ them;

landlords or other tenants are evicting and ostracising people who openly reveal

their status. These are problems we have yet to deal with as a society, " said

Ankobiah.

While the Ghana AIDS Commission estimates that about 90 percent of Ghanaians are

aware of HIV/AIDS, health officials concede that the stigmatisation of people

living with the virus remains the biggest challenge.

According to Sakyi Awuku Amoa, head of the commission, earlier campaigns

inadvertently contributed to creating the problem by associating AIDS with death

and focusing too heavily on the fear factor.

" The epidemic of stigma, discrimination, blame and collective denial is making

all preventative interventions ... very difficult, " Awuku Amoa admitted.

Patients and health workers agreed that enabling people living with HIV/AIDS to

afford treatment, keep their jobs and not be dependent on their families could

go a long way towards combating stigmatisation.

" It all depends on the financial empowerment ... to support ourselves and our

families, have our own accommodation without the fear of being ejected, and have

a well-paying job, " Haruna, a 38-year-old HIV-positive teacher, told PlusNews.

He would never have been able to afford his medication without the government

subsidies that allow him to spend 50,000 cedis (less than US $10) a month on

ARVs: the commercial retail price of his treatment is between $800 and $850 -

far beyond the limits of his $100 a month salary.

" Only when we are empowered can you expect a majority of people living with AIDS

to have the confidence to come out and make their status open, " Haruna pointed

out.

WAAF hospice officials say most of their AIDS patients have been shunned by

their families, who can't afford to look after them.

" Our in-patient capacity is limited to 20 beds, and when the hospice is fully

booked about 70 percent of all our cases are patients who have been dumped here

by their relatives. They only turn up again after the patient is dead to collect

the corpse for burial, " Ankobiah told PlusNews.

" But it is slowly easing up and people are beginning to accept their relatives'

condition, " said Ankobiah, whose clinic provides free treatment after payment of

a 30,000 cedi, or US $10, registration fee.

Nevertheless, Dela, 38, an HIV-positive teacher also on subsidised ARV

treatment, said it would be unthinkable to declare her status publicly - she

runs her own nursery school and any mention of AIDS would be bad for business.

" I do not think it is time ... to declare my status, due to the possible

negative repercussions that can come up, " she affirmed.

When her sister first found out Dela was HIV positive eighteen months ago, she

urged neighbours to withdraw their children from the school.

" Rumours went around, especially when I started the ARV treatment and initially

lost some weight, but now it does not bother me. I know I have the disease and I

just have to live with it. Fortunately, I have always been slim, and since I

still go about my duties like any active person, the rumours have died down, "

Dela told PlusNews.

Afua, 42, a foodstuff trader who lived in the next suburb, was not so lucky: she

died three years ago - just before the government-subsidised ARV programme

started.

" When people realised she had the virus, they stopped buying her foodstuffs and

she had to depend on her aged mother for her upkeep, " Dela said. " As she grew

weaker, prior to her death, she was confined to the outer room of her family's

rented apartment with her own cup and plate, and prevented from going to the

main bedroom area. "

[ENDS]

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Subscriber: AIDS treatments

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