Guest guest Posted August 5, 2006 Report Share Posted August 5, 2006 Making the case against Aids with care Labonita Ghosh, Saturday, August 05, 2006 19:30 IST MUMBAI: Raju barely remembers the parents he lost to a " strange sickness " when he was very young. The seven-year-old lives in a small room on the terrace, hardly ever meeting the aunt and uncle in whose care he is now. His meals and medicines are passed to him from a distance. All the Ahmedabad resident knows is that he's suffering from the same illness his parents had. There are an estimated 1.8-2.2 lakh children in India who are HIV- positive, but they've been a largely invisible and neglected lot. Now the National Aids Control authority of India (NACO) has pledged to provide free treatment, nutrition, test facilities and general care to about 10,000 of these children. It has asked the Indian Association of Paediatricians (IAP) to draw up a road map for doctors to deal with the paediatric HIV-positive (children below 15 years who are infected). " These guidelines will be given to all government-run anti- retroviral (ARV) treatment centres which provide free drugs and support to HIV+ people, so they know how to treat children, " says IAP president Dr Nitin Shah. IAP is currently organising workshops for doctors in eight high-to- medium risk states: Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Manipur, Nagaland, Gujarat, and West Bengal. Children with HIV have been neglected not just in India, but the world over. The UNAIDS Global Survey on HIV/AIDS 2006 says: " The needs of children with HIV have been largely left out of the research agenda. " A 2004 Human Rights Watch report adds: " …HIV/Aids-affected children are being discriminated against in education and health services, denied care by orphanages, and pushed onto the streets and into the worst forms of child labour… " With a second generation of carriers emerging — either infected by parents who didn't know how to prevent parent-to-child transmission, or through unsafe blood transfusions — it's become imperative to address this cause. " The problem involves both infected and affected children, including those orphaned or abandoned because they're positive too, " says Sanjana Bhardwaj of Unicef. To begin with, detection and treatment is a problem. There is a 30- 35 per cent chance of transmission to newborns from an infected mother. That this can be brought down to two per cent with timely medication is hardly known. Moreover, children under 18 months can be tested, not with the more common test but with the prohibitively-expensive Polymerised Chain Reaction (PCR) test. An overseas foundation is currently setting up 25 centres where PCR tests might be conducted cheaply. Also, till recently, all drug combinations and dosages were only for adults. " We would have to break a tablet into halves or quarters for the child and guess the dosage, " says Augustine Veliath of Unicef. " It was both inaccurate and dangerous. " Now that NACO has announced its free-treatment mandate, pharma companies have started manufacturing fixed-drug combinations in child-specific strengths like " baby " and " junior " , says Dr Shah. More compelling, however, is the psycho-social sensitivity required when dealing with HIV-positive children, who are often turned out of school, abandoned by families and left to fend for themselves. Telling the child that he or she is positive is also difficult. " There is no consensus on how old children should be before they can be told they have Aids, " says Dr Sanjay Bavdekar of KEM Hospital. By seven or eight, says Bhardwaj, they can sense that they are very sick; by 10 or 11, some of them realise what's going on. Like Priya, 13, who lives with her two younger sisters at a shelter in Bandra. After nursing her HIV-positive mother till she died, Priya took charge of her siblings. It's a burden no child should ever have to shoulder. It's too bad that the much-needed leg-up from society has only come now. http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?NewsID=1045572 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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