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ZADHR
statement on World AIDS Day
Zimbabwe
Association of Doctors for Human Rights (ZADHR)
December 01, 2006
World AIDS Day
provides an opportunity to focus on the indivisible link between
health and human rights. Promoting and protecting the human rights
of People Living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) underlies all effective responses
to the pandemic as this decreases vulnerability, proactively approaches
elimination of discrimination and stigmatisation and guarantees
access to information about the disease and its prevention and treatment.
A rights-based approach to HIV/AIDS is the key to Stopping AIDS
and Keeping the Promise.
The adoption of a Zimbabwean HIV/AIDS & Human Rights Charter,
in addition to the National HIV/AIDS Policy already in place, followed
by the enactment of legislation which specifically protects the
human rights of PLWHA is paramount. Adoption of legislation which
protects PLWHA from discrimination will encourage voluntary testing
and seeking of treatment. Whilst policy frameworks make a contribution,
the human rights principle of non-discrimination must be enshrined
in enforceable legislation to be effective.
Hundreds of thousands of Zimbabweans are today unable to access
public health care or treatment due to prohibitive costs. These
costs essentially discriminate against the poor and deny them their
right to health. Unaffordable health fees result in PLWHA not seeking
medical treatment even for simple opportunistic infections until
they are very advanced or while they attempt to raise the funds
required. The rights of PLWHA cannot be fulfilled in the absence
of guarantees on access to treatment, both in terms of availability
and affordability.
It has been shown that 'User Fees' contribute
only 2% of the total health service budget. ZADHR urges the Ministry
of Health and Child Welfare to work towards measures that ensure
that People Living with HIV/AIDS are exempt from all health care
fees in the public health care system. These fees do not aid in
solving the funding problem in the health service but do prevent
the poor from exercising their right to seek much needed medical
attention and access treatment.
Visit the ZADHR fact
sheet
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