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SAfAIDS in bid to increase HIV and AIDS knowledge levels amongst
Zim media practitioners
Beatrice
Tonhodzayi, Southern Africa HIV and AIDS Information Dissemination
Service (SAfAIDS)
January 15, 2009
Southern Africa
HIV and AIDS Information Dissemination Service (SAfAIDS) with support
from Population
Services International (PSI) and the National
AIDS Council, under Global Fund Round Five, is facilitating
theme based discussion fora with the media in a bid to sensitise
journalists about HIV and AIDS, and TB issues.
Last week, a
discussion was held whose main objective was to increase awareness
amongst media practitioners about the different models of HIV testing
and counseling.
For many years,
the voluntary counselling and testing (VCT) model has been touted
as the ideal approach to people discovering their HIV status in
Zimbabwe. However coverage of testing through VCT has remained inadequate
in most settings. Coupled with high levels of stigma, this has had
led to poor uptake of such services, where available.
It has also
been observed that though crucial in the uptake of counseling and
testing services, provider-initiated testing and counselling (PITC)
has remained under-utilised. The model, which represents an HIV
testing model that can be recommended as part of the standard health
care to all people who visit health care facilities, can lead to
an increased uptake of testing and counseling, if fully integrated
within the health provision system.
Addressing journalists
at the media briefing, held at the SAfAIDS Zimbabwe office, medical
practitioner, Dr. Paul Chimedza said PITC should be recommended
as part of the standard health care to:
- all people
presenting at health facilities with signs, symptoms, or medical
conditions that indicate HIV infection such as oral thrush or
Tuberculosis
- infants
born to HIV positive women as a routine component of the follow-up
care
- children
presenting with sub-optimal growth or malnutrition in generalized
epidemics
- men seeking
circumcision as an HIV prevention intervention
With an enabling
environment and adequate resources, Dr. Chimedza said PITC should
even be recommended to all adults and adolescents seen in health
facilities, whether they are medical or surgical practitioners,
public or private institutions, in patients or in the out patients
departments of hospitals.
"It should
be recommended as part of the normal standard of care provided to
the patient, regardless of whether they show signs and symptoms
of underlying HIV infection or not. Even if what brings you to the
hospital is a leg problem, PITC should be offered to you,"
he said.
However, Dr
Chimedza said it was important for the media in its coverage of
PITC issues to make it clear to the public that a person could still
decline the test offered under PITC if they did not wish to be tested.
"It is
not a mandatory form of testing, so one should not feel they are
being forced to undergo an HIV test once they visit a health service
provider. However, we would like to encourage people to take advantage
of PITC, to find out their HIV status, which is the best way of
getting access to the relevant treatment, care and support early,"
he said.
Journalists
raised a lot of pertinent issues, among them whether PITC should
be encouraged in Zimbabwe with the current challenges in terms of
a shortage of human resources in health institutions and access
and availability of anti-retroviral drugs. This should lead to an
increase in the number of news articles generated by the Zimbabwean
media that explore current HIV and AIDS interventions and how the
country can move forward in its national response.
Aulora Stally,
the facilitator of the briefings, urged the journalists to hone
in on the personal stories and remove the unnecessary jargon from
their reportage as one way of moving towards a more effective reporting
culture while SAfAIDS country representative, Mrs Monica Mandiki
said the journalists would emerge out of the briefings better informed
about the different testing models and HIV and AIDS and TB issues
in general, which in turn would empower the public, who constitute
the media's audience.
"What you say and don't say actually has a bearing on
how people end up making decisions and living their lives,"
she said.
At the end of
the briefing, journalists said they had gained a better understanding
of the various benefits and disadvantages of PITC and would report
more widely on it as a model the public might want to consider.
The SAfAIDS
media briefings on PITC, Treatment Literacy, HIV and TB and Stigma
and Discrimination respectively will take place in Harare and Bulawayo
on a weekly basis until February.
Visit the SAfAIDS
fact
sheet
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