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Poor
condom use in marriage ups infections
Perpetua
Chikololere, The Standard (Zimbabwe)
August 30, 2010
http://www.thestandard.co.zw/local/26189-poor-condom-use-in-marriage-ups-infections.html
The young couple's
joy echoed throughout the days leading to their marriage. Nokuthula
Dube* (28), the new bride had dreamt of the special day her entire
life.
They had been
in love for a long time and marriage marked the beginning of their
lives together. But unknown to the family and the new bride, the
groom was hiding a modern-day secret till the time of his death:
he was HIV positive.
The death of
her husband and the spiteful father-in-law marked the commencement
of her life as an HIV- positive person.
During a speech
at the funeral, the father-in-law revealed the cause of the death
of his son. It was AIDS. "When my father-in-law said my husband
had died of AIDS that's when it hit me.
"That's
when I decided to get tested and live a positive life for my unborn
child," Dube said. "My husband never told me he was
positive. I was having a series of miscarriages but we never suspected
HIV to be the cause."
Dube's
tale resonates with many young couples who thought marriage would
protect them from HIV. Marriage once the safe haven for young couples
has become risky due to the low condom use within it. Being married
now contributes to the risk of contracting HIV, experts said last
week.
"Not only
men are cheating these days, even the wives are cheating increasing
the high risk of HIV in marriages," Beatrice Tonhodzayi, the
Southern Africa
HIV and AIDS Information Dissemination Service (SAfAIDS) media
programme officer told journalists at a recent briefing.
"The social
organisation of infidelity is shaped by economic inequality, aspirations
for modern lifestyle, gender disparities and contradictory moralities."
Married couples'
greatest risk of contracting HIV is through having sexual intercourse
with their partners. According to SAfAIDS and Population
Services International (PSI), 46% of HIV infections happen within
marriages.
Cases of cheating
among couples have increased with some partners claiming that they
do it because the other partner had been cheating.
Southern Africa
is the region most affected by the pandemic worldwide with the HIV
prevalence rates peaking at between 10% and 40 % of the adult population.
Zimbabwe is
the only country in the region where HIV prevalence has declined
substantially over the past few years.
Tonhodzayi said
one of the reasons the rates had not fallen further was because
condom use within marriages "is infrequent and often not used
at all while rates of extramarital partners are high."
Forced sex and
violence in marriages eliminates women's ability to negotiate
condom use.
Around 18% of
women in Zimbabwe are in polygamous marriages which further increases
their chances of contracting HIV.
*Not her
real name.
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