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Zimbabwe's circumcision drive fails to take off
IRIN News
July 08, 2013
http://www.irinnews.org/report/98379/zimbabwe-s-circumcision-drive-fails-to-take-off
Funds for the
male circumcision programme in Zimbabwe are lying idle, as the Ministry
of Health and Child Welfare says not enough men are coming forward
to use the service, which was launched as part of an HIV-prevention
package.
Following the
recommendations of the World Health Organization (WHO), Zimbabwe
introduced the male circumcision programme in November 2009. Studies
have shown that the practice can help reduce HIV transmission in
men by about 60 percent. The government plans to circumcise about
3 million men by the end of 2015, but the target may be overly ambitious,
as less than 10 percent of the targeted population has yet been
circumcised.
A huge challenge
in the promotion of male circumcision is that Zimbabwe is traditionally
not a circumcising country. The practice is common among only a
few communities in Zimbabwe, particularly the Shangani tribe of
Chiredzi, in the Lowveld part of the country.
Owen Mugurungi,
coordinator of the HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis unit in the Ministry
of Health and Child Welfare, admitted that the response to the male
circumcision programme has been extremely low, despite high levels
of optimism when the programme was launched.
“We are
not happy with the response for male circumcision... We have only
circumcised close to 8 percent of the target population, whereas
we need to make sure that we go way beyond 85 percent of the target
population, so we need to work hard to reach that target,”
he said.
According to
Mugurungi, the government could save about US$3 billion in HIV treatment
if uptake of the programme is increased; through circumcision, the
country could reduce the rate of infection from around 130,000 annual
new infections to less than 50,000 by 2020.
Fears
of surgery
Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights HIV/AIDS manager Tinashe Mundawarara
has called for research into the reasons behind the programme’s
low uptake.
“If there
is that much belief in male circumcision out there, demand would
have been overwhelming. Traditional social marketing has failed
to push it in the manner it has done in the promotion of condom
use,” said Mundawarara.
Another barrier
to the programme’s success is the fact that male circumcision
is a surgical procedure, and people are generally fearful of medical
procedures. Social marketing efforts should aim to allay people’s
fears about circumcision, he noted.
The government
hopes that the recent WHO approval, or "prequalification",
of PrePex - a nonsurgical device - could help service providers
address some of the fears over surgical procedures.
PrePex uses
an elastic band that compresses the foreskin against a stiff plastic
ring. The elastic band cuts off blood supply to the foreskin, which
loses sensation and dries out, similar to the process of removing
the umbilical cord of a newborn. The PrePex has to be worn for a
week, after which it is removed and the dead foreskin is cut off.
More
promotion needed
According to
UNAIDS country coordinator Tatiana Shomiliana, extensive consultations
are underway to understand why there is such a low uptake of the
circumcision programme. Preliminary investigations show that poor
messaging could be a contributing factor.
“We need
to talk more as stakeholders. We need to talk more as the Zimbabwean
community about these issues because the rates of male circumcision
are really low,” said Shomiliana.
Zimbabwe has
received about $15 million from the US President’s Emergency
Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) for voluntary medical circumcision.
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