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Condom
use: Is it the answer to the HIV pandemic in Zimbabwe and Africa
at large
Jephiter Tsamwi
March 06, 2013
Sometime last
year, the debate on whether condoms should be given to school children
made headlines but surprisingly the topic died without tangible
and conclusive results. Well, for many it seem as if the issue is
a mater for the archive, or a tired story to talk about in the press
today. But after attending one public discussion on condom use in
Zimbabwe in Harare this week, I could see the conflicting realities
between what people think about the whole idea of condom use in
the country and the actuality of the HIV horrible pandemic and endemic
statistics. Indeed the debate on condom use is still as fresh as
it was in the past.
Whether it is
right or wrong to ensure availability of condoms in schools or not,
will not be much of a concern in this piece. But within the discussions,
there goes another dimension to the discourse which has never been
awarded the adequate discussion time that it deserves. What I am
talking about here is a simple yet though invoking question that
we can conveniently put it like: Is condom use in Zimbabwe promoting
promiscuity or serving lives?
Condoms have
been widely embraced in developing countries perhaps more than they
have been in the very countries where they are manufactured. At
surface level, we can simply agree that the reason why condoms are
imported in large quantities into the country correlates with the
specific realities of the HIV pandemic. In other words the perceived
risk by the people encourages them to use condoms. Yes, the commercialisation
of condoms is something that we cannot deny, yet so far as painful
as it is, that HIV is a serious threat to development in developing
countries is our lived reality. According to UNAIDS, an estimated
5 million new HIV/AIDS infections occurred in sub-Saharan Africa
in 2003. At the same time, World Health Organization (WHO), say
40.3 million people now live with HIV infections with two-thirds
of them in sub-Saharan Africa. An HIV free generation remains a
pipeline dream considering the latest statistics that we have. But
before we get much into that, it is better to start by unpacking
the following issue
Are
condoms the solution to HIV in Zimbabwe?
To believe that
the “triple C” concept will lead us to the land of Canaan
is perhaps indicative of personified simplicity and naivety in its
spectacular fashion. Correct and Consistent use of Condoms does
work and for sure it can do us the tricks and produce the results
that will put a smile in all and sundry. It is the practicability
of this simple yet technical aspect that seems almost impossible
in the African setting.
HIV prevalence
is a gendered phenomenon characterized by marked inequalities between
women and men. Further, it is a challenge whose causes go beyond
limitless promiscuity and multi-sexual partners. Attitudes, perceptions,
socio-economic relations within different intergroup like between
men and women all feed into the seriousness of the challenge. This
means condoms are not an end in themselves if other critical factors
are not addressed.
Pessimistic
as she sounds, British investigative journalist Sue Ellin Browder
argues that condoms have never been shown to reduce HIV infection
rates and AIDS deaths in general-population epidemics like those
in sub-Saharan Africa. Accordingly, it is a paradox that the more
condoms are sent to Africa, the more widespread the disease has
become.
In South Africa,
which has strongly promoted condoms as the best way to prevent AIDS,
the number of free condoms distributed to the public rose rapidly
between 1994 and 1998, from 6 million to 198 million. Including
those sold, the total number of condoms distributed in South Africa
during 1998 was nearly 210 million. However, statistics released
by South Africa’s government in 2005 revealed that death rates
skyrocketed from an average of 870 deaths a day in 1997 to 1,370
deaths a day in 2002-a 57 per cent increase while deaths of individuals
ages 15 to 49 more than doubled!
Coming closer
home, the Zimbabwe Demographic Health Survey (2011) reveals high
prevalence rate within the age group that have been proved by research
to be the highest users of condoms. For instance, the survey reveals
that for women HIV prevalence increases from 4 per cent among those
aged 15-19 to a peak of 29% in the 30-34 and 35-39 age groups before
slightly declining to 23% among women aged 45-49.
With this sad
reality, where then is the problem, yet we know condoms have been
scientifically tested and proven that they can reduce the risk of
HIV transmission by more than 94%. Let’s consider the following
issues.
Use
of condoms as sign of a deep rooted identity crisis
Zimbabwe can
be argued to be a Christian country; and the latest population census
can prove that. I, myself, am a devoted Christian and part of the
doctrines within the holy bible that defines righteousness is the
principle of one man, one wife. To the believers, sex before marriage
and adultery are sins in the eyes of the Lord. In a country full
of Christians, why then is HIV prevalence sky rocketing yet it is
public knowledge that multiple and concurrent sexual partnerships
within the populace is the major driving factor. It shows we really
don’t have a clear stand point of who we are and what we want.
The same Christians have a tendency of despising condom use, yet
it’s the solution that can serve their lives in their unholy
harlotry acts which they practice right in church, hiding behind
the hymn book.
Secondly, we
have a traditional value system that had its own parameters, dos
and don’ts when it comes to sexuality. In the words of renowned
Culture critique Pathisa Nyathi, the African parent has lost his/her
child. Lost in that the very system and values that sustained us
as Africans for decades failed to triumph in the vicious war against
foreign encroaching systems that knocked down what used to be our
pride. It was sexuality education without use of condoms. It was
a system that promoted patriarchy but without social anarchy. A
system that promoted polygamy but the marriages would last, family
valued, sex sanctified, and cultured. Well gone are the days.
Analysts say
Africa’s position gives it an excellent vantage position for
self-reflection. Whether condoms are what will serve us or not is
a question that needs to be critically analysed today. Of notable
interest is that Arab nations, states that remained resolute in
defending their culture and systems, are almost HIV free sections
of the world. Never mind the statistics that made world news in
2012 that HIV prevalence re-doubled in these nations. We all know
power dynamics and relations between those who were saying it and
the alleged victims. But that’s a topic for another day. Where
then do we stand as Africans, and as Zimbabweans to be specific?
Globalisation is real and it is a threat to an otherwise value system
that might have had been the solution to the pandemic that has no
cure.
Daniel Yaw Fiaveh, a health researcher would ask; how can Africans
strive toward a healthy balance between the positive elements of
their own culture and those of other non-African cultures without
losing a healthy attitude towards their own culture?
Wrong Attitudes and Perception have cost us a fortune.
Winston Churchil once said, “Attitude is one little thing
that makes a big difference” After all, was it not Mahatma
Gandhi whom in his wisdom taught us “Keep your thoughts positive
because your thoughts become your words. Keep your words positive
your words become your behaviour. Keep your behaviour positive because
your behaviour becomes your habits. Keep your habits positive become
your habits become your values, and your values become your destiny”.
Do we have this kind of an attitude when it comes to condom use?
Studies that
have been done have proven that both men and women have negative
perceptions about the male or female condom. They have a retrogressive
mentality that tells them condoms have no space in the matrimonial
homes or in steady relationships. Couples feel if a partner suggests
the idea of condomising, it is a sign of lack of trust. Men are
very frequent users of condoms but they only do so when they hook
up commercial sex workers in the streets. The assumption is that
the wife at home is clean and safe and condom use is not but a waste
of time, but only gullible individuals would live guided by this
deathly assumption.
A study by Kpoti
Kitissou “HIV Infection and Condom Use in Sub-Saharan Africa”
reveals yet another dimension to attitudes and perception problems
when it comes to condom use. He says condoms offer protection but
do not warrant individuals a permit to be reckless. This is where
the argument that “condoms are promoting promiscuity and not
serving lives” comes on board. Kitissou argues that even though
condoms are highly effective in reducing chances of HIV infection,
that sense of feeling safer makes individuals extreme risk takers
doing activities that may lead to HIV infection. If it is the case,
then the whole idea of promoting condom use need careful scrutiny.
Coming back
to the old debate of whether condoms should be availed to high schools
or not, it would be good if as a nation we stop to act upon assumptions.
That school kids are engaging sex remain an invalid fact unless
a thorough and valid research has been done. Yes the media, especially
social networks have exposed children to gratuitous content that
subjects and tempts children to engage in risk behaviour but says
who? It would be a lie to say that back in the days pornographic
materials were not there and children were not exposed. It will
be naïve to believe that System Tazvida’s Simoko music
was not tempting but that did not warrant the need for availability
of condoms in schools.
Personally,
I believe availing condoms is not an end in itself. It is our attitudes
and perceptions that tell us not to speak about sex within the family
set up, worse to discuss about proper condom use that has cost us.
Availing condoms should go simultaneously with sexuality education
so that In the end, condoms will not promote promiscuity but offer
protection against the backdrop of an engendered and cultured society
that seems not so much ready to empress the dictates of changing
times. This brings me to the next aspect
Religion
and Culture: Enemy or Foe in the Discourse?
Culture has been well documented as one factor whose practices are
accelerating the spread of HIV. But such theories need to be revised.
For instance I don’t remember when was the last time I heard
of a case of wife inheritance, kuzvarira and other practices that
have been the scapegoat for long time. The problem does not lie
exactly in those aspects. Rather that culture that defines a perfect
wife as the one who is submissive is what need to be addressed.
Females find it hard to negotiate, let alone initiative sex with
their partners. But we have the female condom in the equation which
UNIFEM confirms can reduce chances of HIV transmission by 90%.
Dominique Meekers
and Kerry Richter in their study Factors Associated with Female
Condom use in Zimbabwe argue that when used correctly, the female
condom is as effective as the male condom in reducing HIV transmission
and can be inserted hours before intercourse making it less likely
than the male condom to reduce sexual spontaneity. But again, the
set back is that culture has made men to believe that dry sex is
the way to go. Albeit improvements that have been made for the female
condom to be more comfortable to both partners, its acceptability
levels within the society remains low. Instead of using it, women
are found using unmentionable herbs that risk them to cervical cancer
all in the effort to keep their privates dry to satisfy their wrongly
cultured husbands and partners. This goes back to the gender imbalances
between men and women in which sex have been viewed to be an act
of meeting the gratifications of the penetrator.
Social and gender constructs limit the voice of women when it comes
to sex and relationship. Masculine identities suppress women’s
sexual freedom, and with men blessed with the material and resource
power, subordination on the part of women is almost inevitable.
Negotiating for safe sex, and in particular negotiating for condom
use guarantees women of utmost failure. Patriarchal men will not
listen to their plea.
Communication
and couple dynamics are yet another set of important determinants.
Due to the nature of our culture, women usually do not have a say
in how, where, when and what time they can make love with their
partners. At the end of the day, condoms seem not to be producing
the proper results that they are supposed to in the quest to end
the rapid and vicious spread of the pandemic.
Way
forward and possible recommendations
First of all,
if condoms are truly meant to serve lives, can somebody explain
to me why carex condoms are going for 2 United States Dollars in
our shops? The idea of commercialising the would be life serving
products should be put to an end. Reliable, strong and effective
condoms should not be made a reserve for the few who can afford.
These are the products that should be given for free and government
through the responsible ministries should lead in this drive.
Working with
the students in tertiary institutions, I am very much aware that
$2 may sound cheaper for many but for a student in our universities,
very few can afford that but the painful reality is that they will
not stop engaging in sex. Remember Nesidai and Ng’ang’a
study at a Kenyan university where they discovered that 62 5% of
the students had sexual intercourse within their first year at college!
If it is the case with a university in Kenya, what more at Midlands
State University, just to give an example?
Apart from that,
condom distribution is far from being the true remedy unless proper
education on the use of the condoms is done. By 2011, Population
Service International (PSI) was marketing more than 45 million
male condoms and just over one million female condoms. However,
the statistics available seem to be fragmented and based on distribution
rather than actual consumption. How they are consumed is perhaps
another important element that needs careful investigation to avoid
compromising their effectiveness to users.
Acceptability
levels of the condoms, especially the female condom can only be
improved when people’s attitudes and perception are changed.
At society level, people need more education and orientation to
enhance their appreciation of the condoms. A clear message that
condom use is not a substitute for promiscuity need to be emphasised.
As much as we want to advocate for the condom use, so should we
emphasise on the one man, one wife concept. As Nomathemba Chiwoneso
Chandiwana argues, HIV prevention programmes in this population
should focus on delaying sexual debut, increasing perceived risk
of HIV infection, encouraging partner communication, making condoms
more easily accessible to young men and addressing gender equalities.
Those organisations working around this area, SAYWHAT,
PSI, SAFAIDS,
NAC, ZNFPC
and others, you have a lot of work to do.
Before I conclude my long piece, it would be important to remind
you dear reader that condom use indeed does not offer a magic bullet
kind of result. A classic demonstration to this is given by Sue
Ellin Browder. She says: “Let’s assume that condoms
are 85 percent effective (the most commonly accepted scientific
finding). It means that if 100 people have sex with HIV-infected
partners and they never use condoms, seven of the 100 will become
infected within a year. If they always use condoms, one in 100 people
will become infected. This looks impressive at first glance. But
applied to a population of 10 million couples having sex for three
years, we’re talking about approximately 300,000 new cases
of HIV/AIDS. And that’s assuming perfect condom use, which
doesn’t happen in broad populations in real life.”
Condomise my dear reader, it works, but don’t exaggerate your
safety. Be responsible, sticking to one uninfected partner is the
best.
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