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2004
The first AAAO was launched in April 2004 and covered the growing
problem of HIV disease and life cover and the many insurance
underwriting dilemmas around AIDS. The impact of antiretroviral
treatment on future underwriting trends was evaluated as the
government had just initiated its first pilot treatment programme in
the Western Cape.
The June 2004 issue covered the launch by the South African Business Coalition on HIV/AIDS (SABCOHA) of its workplace toolkit to help the country’s small and medium size businesses implement an HIV and AIDS programme. Also in this issue Gavin George of the Health Economics and AIDS Research Department (HEARD) at the University of KwaZulu-Natal analysed various corporate AIDS programmes to see whether they were working. He concluded that while the provision of antiretroviral treatment to infected employees is not a cheap option for companies it has been proven that ‘the more you treat the more money you save’, and that it is always in the interests of the company to treat infected employees earlier rather than later when they are likely to become AIDS-sick and therefore less productive.
A further issue in September 2004 comprehensively examined the
possible impact of the widespread and worrying myth that having sex
with a virgin can cure a person of AIDS.
2005
In the April 2005 issue the complexities of trying to implement
behavioural change, the crux of all successful prevention campaigns,
were explored as well as the issue of underreporting of AIDS deaths
in national statistics. Pam Groenewald and Debbie Bradshaw from the
Medical Research Council clearly demonstrated that misclassification
of deaths was making it difficult to estimate the actual number of
deaths due to AIDS. When the HIV status of the deceased is unknown
and access to medical records is difficult, misclassification of the
immediate cause of death (e.g. tuberculosis, pneumonia, diarrhoea
etc.) often occurs. In addition, it was found that doctors were often
reluctant to state AIDS as a cause of death because of concerns
about confidentiality and the potential impact on bereaved families
in terms of social stigma and the loss of funeral policy or life
insurance benefits. These remain problems today although various
methods are now used to adjust the statistics to reflect AIDS
mortality more accurately.
The November 2005 issue tackled the grim choice for unemployed
people with AIDS in South Africa – the disability grant or
antiretroviral therapy? If you are sick enough to qualify for a
disability grant, you are sick enough to qualify for antiretroviral
treatment. This will then make you well enough to disqualify you
from getting a disability grant, which is the only source of income
for many families.
2006
In the March 2006 issue Dr Warren Parker of the Centre for AIDS
Development Research and Evaluation (CADRE) investigated the burning
issue of whether widespread and expensive prevention campaigns were
having any effect on the prevalence of HIV in South Africa,
especially in the light of around 500 000 new infections each year.
Reducing HIV prevalence (the total number of HIV-positive people) is
not easily achieved, given that prevalence generally only decreases
if there are major reductions in HIV incidence (new infections)
amongst youth and/or increases in deaths of people with HIV and
AIDS. The evidence suggested that prevention campaigns were having a
minimal impact although other indicators, such as the uptake of
Voluntary Counselling and Testing (VCT) and reported condom use,
were increasing markedly. He argued that as sexual behaviour
involves a complex interplay of psychological, cultural and
contextual factors any prevention programmes that focus mainly on a
rational choice model or on ABC (Abstain, Be faithful, Condomise)
type messaging will always be inadequate. Parker concluded that if
HIV prevention efforts are to work the country needs to move beyond
the same old theories and communication campaigns that focus
exclusively on individual behaviour. Prevention interventions need
to be embedded in an understanding of risk, with a particular
emphasis on addressing issues of power, disempowerment and
contextually determined vulnerability.
Dr Pren Naidoo, HIV Programme Manager of the
City Health Directorate in Cape Town, examined critical issues
around VCT programmes in the May 2006 issue, especially given that
only 10% of South Africans were then estimated to know their HIV
status. The basis for promoting VCT is that it enables individuals
to initiate or maintain behaviours that prevent both acquisition and
transmission of the virus. From a community perspective, the
widespread availability of VCT services helps to normalise HIV,
reduces denial and stigma, and encourages communities to mobilise
support to address local needs. Naidoo presents a strong case for a
major paradigm shift with regard to VCT, arguing for routine testing
and for HIV disease to be framed within a chronic disease model. The
emphasis would then be on a range of care and support interventions
that commence early in the disease and promote wellness.
2007
In the November 2007 issue Peter Doyle, then CEO of
Metropolitan Holdings, examined the role of leadership in HIV and
AIDS from a corporate perspective. The 2007 Labour Force Survey
estimated that only 12.6 million people of a total population of
47.5 million were employed. Those 12.6 million have to generate
sufficient wealth to feed and develop the whole nation and it is
vital that they remain healthy. Effective workplace programmes, to
both prevent and address HIV disease, are therefore essential for
the economy of this country. The Siyakhana Project, also profiled in
this issue, offers comprehensive counselling, testing and treatment
services to around 20 participating businesses. It was started in
response to the economic reality that while small and medium size
businesses in South Africa provide half the employment opportunities
in the private sector and contribute nearly half of the country’s
GDP, very few have implemented even rudimentary HIV and AIDS
interventions in the workplace. In the first two years of its
operation the Siyakhana Project provided VCT to over 3,000
employees, of which approximately 10% were positive. The Project is
widely viewed as an international benchmark, and expanded
significantly in 2008. Participating companies pay a nominal fee to
benefit from this extensive programme.
2008
In the December 2008 issue Linzi Smith, Managing Director of
Education, Training and Counselling (ETC), provided an in-depth
summary about the workplace management system standard, SANS16001:
2007. This standard is an excellent tool to help all businesses
achieve best practice in their HIV and AIDS workplace programmes and
was launched in July 2007 by the South African Bureau of Standards
as a comprehensive workplace response to the epidemic.
2009
In the January 2009 issue Dr Lize Hellström described the
success of the Stellenbosch and Mbekweni after-hours clinics in the
Western Cape, which opened in 2007. To make HIV testing and support
truly accessible it is necessary for these services to be available
after working hours and to take into account men’s needs. Around 70%
of patients at HIV state clinics are women and many of these clinics
are reputed to appear unfriendly to men’s requirements. Men who are
HIV-positive therefore tend to present late for treatment, which
adversely affects the outcome. Both men and women are attending
these after-hours clinics in approximately equal numbers where they
are seen without an appointment. Clients are largely working people
and, particularly in Stellenbosch, students. In Mbekweni,
predominantly young men (56%) aged 18-25 are accessing the VCT
service, which illustrates the vital need for such clinics.
The March 2009 issue covered the launch of the B the
Future cell book at the Fourth South African AIDS Conference in
2009. The book is an HIV and AIDS information resource that can be
downloaded onto a cell phone (in less time than it takes to download
a ring tone), allowing people to access important information easily
and privately. Given that 80% of the country has access to a mobile
phone whereas only 10% has access to the Internet, this represents
an important communication channel. Mobile phone users simply need
to SMS the word HIV to 32907 at a cost of R1 in order to receive the
full cell book with detailed information on: HIV prevention and
testing; counselling and support; how to live positively with HIV;
support services; and frequently asked questions. The information is
written in plain English and, once downloaded, B the Future is
always available with or without a signal or airtime.
The June 2009 issue provided a summary of the Fourth 2009 South
African AIDS Conference in Durban. More than 60 presentations were
made in six different tracks under the overarching theme of ‘Scaling
up for Success’. The six tracks included Basic Sciences; Clinical
Sciences; Epidemiology; Prevention and Public Health Systems; Social
and Economic Sciences, Human Rights and Ethics; and Best Practice
and Programmes. This biennial conference has become an important
think-tank and networking opportunity which is attended by around
4000 delegates, most of whom are from African countries.
In the penultimate issue, September 2009, Professor Courtenay
Sprague of the Graduate School of Business at the University of the
Witswatersrand looked at the impact of the HIV epidemic on the
women of sub-Saharan Africa. Sub-Saharan African women of
reproductive age are disproportionately affected by HIV, with women
in younger age groups being four times more likely to be
HIV-infected than men. Recent statistics in South Africa showed that
the incidence (number of new infections) of HIV among females peaked
in the 20-29 year age group at 5.6%, more than six times the
incidence found in the equivalent male age group (0.9%). Among the
15-24 age group, females accounted for a staggering 90% of recent
HIV infections. Women’s greater vulnerability to HIV disease is both
biological and social. Biologically, women are more susceptible to
contracting sexually transmitted infections, including HIV, than
men. Socially, African women’s unequal status and position in
society makes them further vulnerable. High-risk sexual behaviour is
associated with an inability to negotiate condom use, peer pressure
to have sex, and ‘coercive’ male-dominated relationships. Studies
have demonstrated that social context and position, as well as
cultural factors and norms, have been significant in increasing HIV
transmission among African women.
The recurrent themes and problems in the AAAO newsletters have
revolved around an inadequate uptake of VCT and ineffective
prevention campaigns, which are doing little to reduce the number of
new infections, especially amongst the female youth. It has become
clear that without the massive scale-up of contextually-appropriate
prevention interventions amongst men and women of all age groups,
South Africa will continue to experience the scourge of the HIV
epidemic. It is therefore very encouraging that the Department of
Health is currently launching a massive campaign aimed at
encouraging millions of South Africans to test for HIV. Dubbed the
HCT or HIV Counselling and Testing campaign, the initiative will roll
out in April this year. The target is to have around 15 million
South Africans tested for HIV by June 2011. The HCT approach differs
from VCT in that health workers will now offer all patients a
routine HIV test, irrespective of whether symptoms of HIV are
present. The campaign will be launched in Gauteng before being
rolled out to other provinces.
While the business and scientific responses to the HIV epidemic
are now well developed and have been documented by AAAO over the
last seven years, it is the community response to the socio-economic
problems that remains fractured and less well developed. It is
therefore appropriate to make way for a different kind of newsletter
which will report on the Metropolitan Foundation’s Live the Future
programme that aims to mobilise and motivate leaders and communities
to collaborate in their responses to HIV and AIDS.
Linda Scott read Human Sciences at Oxford University and
recently gained an MSc in Nutritional Medicine with a research
project on the role of nutrition in HIV disease. She currently
manages the AIDSbuzz.org website which provides up-to-date
information and directories to help communities and individuals
address the socio-economic problems of the epidemic. She co-founded
Mothers for All, a non-profit organisation which trains and supports
the caregivers of children orphaned or made vulnerable by AIDS.
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