HIV/AIDS Situation Would Upsetting In Bangladesh
HIV/AIDS Situation Would Upsetting In Bangladesh
- Mohammad Khairul Alam - - Executive Director - - Rainbow Nari O Shishu Kallyan Foundation - - Rainbowngo@gmail.com - AIDS which poses a challenge to the mankind, has already claimed the lives of more than 40 million and an additional 14,000 are added everyday to this alarming figure. Each year 3 million are dying of HIV/AIDS. According to a WHO report, an estimated 42 million people throughout the globe are currently living with HIV. It is spread through contact with the blood or semen of a person infected with HIV. This can happen during unsafe sex (without condom). People who inject drugs might get HIV if they share a needle with an infected person. HIV also spreads through blood transfusion. HIV is not spread by casual contact such as hugging, kissing, holding hands, sitting on toilet seats, or sharing clothing.
Recently, “Rainbow Nari O Shishu Kallyan Foundation” has focused mostly on three types of work on HIV/AIDS in Bangladesh -- community mobilisation for prevention through promotion of fidelity, condom-use and abstinence; advocacy on access to affordable treatments, targeted at medicine producers and international donor organisations; and work to ensure “mainstream” support to AIDS-affected individuals and communities for integration on poverty mitigation work. HIV/AIDS has good relation with poverty and gender inequality. Without decline in gender discrimination and poverty, all efforts to prevent HIV/AIDS or sustainable development in this sector will fail. Campaigns to raise consciousness on HIV and AIDS have to be clear and with the simple messages such as using condoms, and these should address deep-rooted gender inequality and interpret the risks to women which are beyond their control.
In prevention strategies, adolescent girls do appear as a target group. The education sector, and schools in particular, should be often a major target for HIV/AIDS prevention programmes, via sex education and knowledge of condom-use. By the way we have to address or find out those who didn”t get chance to enrol in these institutions. We have to evolve different strategies to reach the messages to them. In addition, health education programmes which aim to empower women and girls to use condoms often fail adequately to tackle the actual problems because of imbalanced power relations. The desired changes in the behaviour of adolescent girls and boys cannot happen without programmes addressing such issues like how a girl can say no, but also why boys, teachers and other adults should respect the human rights of girls. Health and education sectors can work together to develop prevention programmes in schools/colleges, which enhance awareness of gender inequality among boys and school/college staffs, as well as girls themselves. Such programmes also need to expand beyond the school boundaries to reach adolescent girls and boys who do not attend school/college or have dropped out. This may help reduce girls” continuing vulnerability to violence, coercive sex and HIV infection. In many developing countries, poverty and gender discrimination are both strongly linked to the spread of HIV/AIDS. Gender and age analysis shows the ways in which women and girls of various ages are vulnerable to the infection and in need of support to enable the survivors to overcome the economic and social effects of the epidemic. In fact, HIV/AIDS and poverty alleviation strategies are interconnected.
Women empowerment can prevent gender discrimination, which justifies a holistic approach of policies and programmes to reduce poverty and address HIV/AIDS. For example, poverty leads women into unsafe sexual encounters, and speeds the onset of AIDS-related illnesses. Violence against women and girls is common in societies with high instability or conflicts. All these factors establish the fact that more females than males are being newly infected every day. It also indicates that women are more likely to contract HIV and fall sick with AIDS at a younger age than men. Development organisations and policymakers have not yet completely taken into account the demographic changes caused by HIV and AIDS, although there is a growing awareness of the critical need to do this. Combined gender and age analysis is a necessary step to help development organisations to design policies and programmes that would decrease vulnerability to the epidemic, and minimise its impact on health and livelihoods.
References: UNAIDS, World Bank, Rainbow Nari O Shishu Kallyan Foundation
About the Author
Mohammad Khairul Alam Executive Director Rainbow Nari O Shishu Kallyan Foundation Nowbabgonj- Section, Dhaka – 1212 Bangladesh Email: Rainbowng@gmail.com www.plusbangla.com Tel: 88028628908 Mobile: 0171344997
Education: MSS (Master in Social Science), Social welfare, 1995 from the Dhaka University, Dhaka, Bangladesh Skills: • Experience in Gender issue, Non Formal Education, Technology Based Education, HIV/ AIDS Project Implementation. • Experience in training planning, workshop, advocacy camping, monitoring and evaluation. • Experience in Partnership Based Project Implementation. • Experience in work with Rural disadvantaged adolescents and youth. • Proficient in Non- Formal Education, Technological Based Education, Gender, HIV/ AIDS Project Proposal writing, Project Design, Strategic Planning etc. • Experience in BCC Materials development. • Experience in E-learning course curriculum development and implementation.
Experience of Consultancy: I am engaged in consultancy of HIV/AIDS related programme, and currently three National NGO’s HIV/AIDS programme are running under my supervision. These three NGOs’ name & address below..
1. Association for Rural Development and Service (ARDS) 2. Human Development Library (HDL) 3. Bangladesh Extension Education Services (BEES)
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