|
Back to Index
Zim
prisoners, rural women fail to access AIDS drugs
Prince Nyathi, ZimOnline
November 29, 2007
http://www.zimonline.co.za/Article.aspx?ArticleId=2391
HARARE - Prisoners
and rural women in Zimbabwe are failing to access life-prolonging
AIDS drugs despite the country making huge strides in reducing HIV
prevalence rates, says a new report by an international treatment
group.
The International Treatment
Preparedness Coalition (ITPC), that advocates free access to anti-retroviral
drugs (ARVs), said prisoners and rural women were failing to access
the drugs due to poverty and lack of information.
The report,
titled, "Missing
the Target 5: Improving AIDS Drugs Access and Advancing Health Care
for All," says prisoners in Zimbabwean jails were among
the hardest hit due to a severe economic crisis gripping the country.
The report adds that
Zimbabwe's prison population was "the most neglected and vulnerable
group" in the country adding that out of the estimated 20 000
prisoners in Zimbabwean jails, at least 4 000 were infected and
susceptible to HIV and TB.
"With no sero-prevalence
survey or statistics on HIV in prisons, experts warn that the country
could be sitting on a time bomb," warns the report that was
released to the media on Tuesday.
The group said the majority
of HIV infected rural women were failing to access ARVs forcing
most of the women to resort to herbal treatments to manage their
health.
"Many of those in
rural areas or with limited resources have opted to manage their
symptoms with herbal treatments," said the report.
Zimbabwe has one of the
highest HIV/AIDS infection rates in the world with the pandemic
killing an estimated 2 500 people in the country every week.
The AIDS crisis has been
worsened by a severe economic recession that has manifested itself
in rampant poverty, massive unemployment and poverty.
The economic crisis has
hit hardest Zimbabwe's prisons and health delivery system with reports
suggesting that prisoners were surviving on a single meal of boiled
cabbages and the staple sadza a day.
An estimated 1.3 million
people are said to be living with HIV/AIDS in Zimbabwe with 132
000 being children below the age of 14 while over 650 000 are women.
Of these, only 91 000
people were on the government's ARV free treatment programme.
In the only few pieces
of good news to come from Zimbabwe, Health Minister David Parirenyatwa
last month said Zimbabwe's HIV prevalence rate had declined from
18.1 percent to 15.6 percent.
Parirenyatwa attributed
the success to a vigorous AIDS awareness campaign carried out by
the Harare authorities.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|