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Critique of how the disabled have been sidelined in HIV prevention
Joshua Malinga
July 25, 2008

Although people with disability constitute 10% of the world population, they remain invisible and ignored. Disability is both a cause and effect of poverty, and 80% of disabled people live below the poverty datum line in developing countries (UN). Disabled people in all parts of the world experience discrimination and are widely excluded from the social, economic and political life of the community. The traditional way of addressing disability issues has been either through medical or charitable approaches, often based on the assumptions that disability is an individual problem. Organizations for People living with disability rather than organizations made up of disabled people themselves have provided segregated services with little or no recognition of disabled people-s rights to participate as equal citizens. It is the way society is organized to exclude people with impairments that is considered disabling not the individual impairments.

Governments have rarely considered the needs of disabled people when formulating their development co-operation agenda and have in most cases not made sufficient efforts to consult representatives of the disability community. Many donors, aid agencies, Non-governmental organizations do not consider the particular needs of People living with disability in their programmes or projects .Many do not have or practice policies of disability, equality and thus exclude disabled persons from their activities. As a result, development co-operation largely excludes People living with disability.

The national HIV and AIDS responses are not comprehensive, as some marginalized groups of people are not adequately targeted. For instance, people living with disabilities are not meaningfully involved in HIV and AIDS programmes resulting in a major gap. The issue of HIV and AIDS has not been adequately addressed among people living with disabilities yet the disease is a deadly killer among disabled people. HIV and AIDS is a significant and almost wholly unrecognized problem among disabled populations worldwide. Being a person with a disability living with HIV and AIDS is a double handicap that requires serious attention. There is generally tremendous lack of information about HIV and AIDS and terrible assumptions or falsehood that disabled people are not necessarily sexually active compared to able-bodied people. However, this notion is not only true but also malicious as scores of disabled people are not only infected with but also affected by HIV and AIDS.

Whilst the nation has made great strides in targeting other marginalized groups of people like orphaned and vulnerable children (OVC), women and people living with HIV (PLHIV), the people living with disability have not been comprehensively considered. A comprehensive HIV package ought to be one that is target specific and all encompassing of all groups of people. Some people may argue that specifically targeting people living with disability is not a priority; experience has however indicated that if people living with disabilities are not targeted specifically they stand to lose out when grouped with able-bodied people.

Another factor that must be taken into consideration is the tendency of society to view people with disabilities as a single group. Thus, people in wheel chairs have become the popular representation of people with disabilities. This ignores the diversity of disability and the variety of needs experienced by people with different types of disability.

People with disabilities tend to be excluded from the mainstream of society and experience difficulty in accessing fundamental rights. There is furthermore, a strong relationship between disability and poverty. Poverty makes people more vulnerable to disability and disability reinforces and deepens poverty.

The spread of HIV infection and sexual and reproductive ill health are driven by many common root causes, including gender inequality, poverty and the social marginalization of the most vulnerable populations and groups. Strong linkages between HIV and Sexual and Reproductive Health programmes and services, and special effort to ensure that even disabled people can access health services; will result in more relevant and cost-effective programmes with greater impact.

The protection, promotion and respect of human rights of people in general and of people living with disability in particular are essential prerequisites to effective planning, programming and implementation of HIV prevention activities. In other words, one of the principles of effective HIV programmes is that the programmes must be comprehensive in scope and must be at a coverage, scale and intensity that are enough to make a critical difference.

HIV prevention programmes should be planned with and not just for whom they are meant. One famous quote by children advocating for meaningful involvement of children in planning of programmes for them says, "Anything for us without us is not for us!" This could be borrowed and translated to mean that anything for the disabled without the disabled is not for them. "The right to development requires us to take on board the responsibility of ensuring that our organizations are effective and efficient. The right to self-representation-the right that only disabled people should speak for the disabled-implies also the responsibility to advocate for democratic structures which are representative and accountable"(The chairperson of Southern Africa Federation of the Disabled (SAFOD) Senator Moses Masemene, in the 2000 report:3).

Whilst the principle of greater involvement of the PLHIV is formally recognized nationally, regionally and globally, there is need to stimulate greater meaningful involvement of people living with disability. HIV prevention strategies have however failed to address the distinct prevention needs of people living with disability and /or to build capacity of their meaningful participation. The goal must be the right of people with disability to play a full, participatory role in society.

Disabled people are particularly affected by and are vulnerable to HIV and AIDS. Many disabled people are also indirectly affected by HIV and AIDS. They are often dependent on their families and due to HIV and AIDS they risk losing the family who is assisting them. They have inadequate access to information, health care and treatment. Information is rarely available in appropriate formats for disabled persons or adjusted to existing needs. As only very few of the world-s disabled people obtain any form of education, illiteracy is also widespread. There is a lack of information provided for deaf and hearing-impaired people, in Braille for visually impaired people and in any kind of accessible form for disabled people with learning or intellectual disabilities.

The sexuality of disabled persons in general and women with disabilities in particular, is something unknown and often stigmatized and is therefore infrequently discussed. Disabled persons are simply presumed not to have, sexual contacts, which is yet another reason why information about HIV and AIDS does not reach these groups.

How are people living with disability marginalised?

  1. Limited access to health services and facilities.
  2. Infrastructure around most social and health services not user friendly for people living with disability e.g. those on wheel chairs.
  3. Information Education and Communication (IEC) materials not suitably developed to suit different groups of persons living with disability e.g. visually impaired.
  4. People living with disability are in most cases not directly involved in programme planning processes.

HIV and AIDS and policy gaps
Whilst it is plausible that the government has come up with a national HIV and AIDS policy, it is however not clear how the impact of HIV and AIDS on people living with disabilities is going to be addressed.

Baseline survey
There is serious lack of reliable information on the nature and prevalence of disability in Zimbabwe. Government has not made stern efforts to collect data on disabled people. This has led naturally to a failure to integrate disability into mainstream government statistical processes. This lack of up to date baseline information on people with disability has marred HIV intervention efforts as programmes implemented are neither evidence-based nor informed by any statistics on the ground.

Consultations
According to the National Response to HIV and AIDS, the government has the mandate to facilitate and support the establishment and operation of an appropriate HIV and AIDS coordination and advocacy framework. This has since been done through the establishment of National AIDS Council (NAC).The approach NAC took was a multi-sectoral one reflected in the setting up of village, ward, district, provincial and national structures/committees. However, the problem with the establishment of these operational frameworks was the lack of wide consultations with the processes inclusive of marginalized minority groups of people like the disabled.

Language and accessibility of policy and information on HIV and AIDS
The language used in the national policy documents is English. No indications are given in the policy document that its dissemination is to be in any other language but English. The need to make the documents widely accessible to all people of different literacy and ability and disability levels is not catered for .There could have increased accessibility by producing documents in Braille and through audio tapes. However, this was not so probably, because the disabled persons were not consulted or involved in the production of the materials. The marginalisation of disabled people cascades to all other instruments or documents used by civic and non-governmental organizations working with disabled people. There is need to develop more Information Education and Communication (IEC) materials specific for people living with disabilities.

Access to treatment services e.g. ART
The issue of access to treatment whilst a national problem for all people, it should be appreciated that the disabled people are worst affected. It goes without say that if able-bodied people cannot access anything the situation is worse with disabled people who in most instances may remain unheard, unnoticed, ignored or sidelined. There must be a deliberate effort to make treatment services such as the PMTCT, VCT and ART accessible to minority-marginalized groups of people such as the disabled.

Integration and sustainability
Historically, disability issues have been addressed in a piecemeal, fragmented way. This has been one of the key factors contributing to the marginalization of disabled people and the dire poverty of the circumstances in which the majority find themselves. If the needs of disabled people are to be effectively met, disability must be fully integrated into the principles, strategies and framework of all the programmes.

Way forward

  • Governments and organizations should uphold the disabled people-s principle of self-representation and full integration and participation in all programmes.
  • Understand the scale and impact of HIV on people with disability and address it accordingly
  • Ensure access to resources by people with disability
  • Assess to what extent-funded projects are truly inclusive of disabled persons.
  • More specific programmes targeting people with disabilities should be designed

*Joshua Malinga works with Pan African Federation of the Disabled (PAFOD)

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