Uganda: Civil Society Pushes for Elderly
Friendly Aids Policies
By Moses Walubiri, All
Africa
July 5, 2012
Uganda
A consortium of
civil society organizations (CSOs) has lobbied
parliament to enact Aids policies and
interventions that do not exclude the aged. This
has come as Uganda seeks to half the current
HIV/AIDS prevalence rate by 2015, as per the
National HIV/AIDS Strategic plan 2011-2015.
This, they hope, will be reflected in the HIV/AIDS
bill 2010 whose amendments the committee on
HIV/AIDS and other related matters is soon
handling.
CSOs contend that majority of the current AIDS
interventions are proving counterproductive since
they lack a deliberate component of targeting
"older persons as a special population segment at
high risk of HIV infection."
Under their umbrella body - the National HIV
Prevention Advocacy Group for Older Persons in
Uganda - civil society representatives told MPs on
the HIV/AIDS committee that many Ugandans above 60
years are sexually active, yet many AIDS
initiatives are tailored to serving people in the
reproductive age bracket.
"As the country seeks to effectively tackle the
HIV/AIDS pandemic either through legislation or
other interventions, the aged ought to be brought
on board. Forgetting them can prove to be a time
bomb," Margaret Kabango of Uganda Reach the Aged
Association (URAA) noted.
The Program Assistant of Uganda Network of Aids
Service Organizations (UNASO), Joseph Nyende said
a research by URAA shows that 64 percent of aged
persons are sexually active, of which 91 percent
never use condoms during sexual intercourse.
He therefore called for a holistic communication
strategy to equip the aged with AIDS preventive
measures since they are exposed to infection
through nursing their HIV/AIDS infected children.
Other amendments being pushed by civil society
include provision of the elderly infected with HIV
with nutritional support and free health care
services in the management of opportunistic
infections.
MPs Dr. Chris Baryomunsi and committee
chairperson, Rosemary Najjemba, noted that despite
being few, it's no justification to exclude the
elderly in HIV/AIDS polices and interventions.
"Latest data shows that scourge is on the
increase. It's vitally important that no segment
of society is left behind," Dr. Baryomunsi said.
An estimated 1.2m Ugandans are living with
HIV/AIDS, with an average of 130,000 new
infections annually.
This follows a percentage increase in AIDS
prevalence rate from 6.7% to7.3% as of September
2011, according to Ministry of Health data. In
women, it has increased from 7.5% to 8.3% and from
5% to 6.1% in men.
Out of an estimated 600,000 HIV positive people in
need of ARVs, only 300,000 are catered for due to
financial constraints, according to the Uganda
AIDS Commission.
The HIV/AIDS bill 2010 has evoked enormous debate
with some stakeholders calling for expunging of
clauses calling for mandatory testing, disclosure
of results without consent, and criminalization of
attempted and intentional transmission of HIV.
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