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AIDS Among Monogamous Women in South Asia

 
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In early December, about 20 women parliamentarians, journalists and members of nonprofit groups from South Asia, met in Washington, D.C. to come up with strategies to help women suffering from AIDS, to reduce the number of women losing their homes after caring for husbands suffering from the disease, to help HIV-positive women who cannot reach rural clinics and to help teens in the prevention of AIDS. The women are from Bangladesh, India and Pakistan and they came to the U.S. for the South Asia Initiative on Women and HIV-AIDS Policymaking.

There were two specific goals for the program. The members of parliament from the three above mentioned countries were to propose a strategy to improve the lives of women and girls affected by AIDS and HIV. The representatives from the various countries had to come up with a plan for the epidemic. It so happens that ninety percent of the women who are HIV positive got the disease from their husbands or partners, according to United Nations statistics.

Dr. Robert Bollinger, a professor at John Hopkins Center for Clinical Global Health Education said, “The majority of women at risk for HIV are only at risk because of their husbands.” Those husbands engage in very risky behavior such as having unprotected sex with prostitutes or other men, or injecting themselves with drugs.

Less than one percent of women in South Asia are HIV positive, but many women are at risk because they cannot protect themselves from transmission due to lack of information about sex, sexual violence and gender inequality. Bollinger said that reducing that risk is a real challenge because the women are disenfranchised and do not have any control over their reproductive health.

The Pakistani representatives want to help women living in rural areas gain access to treatment. Parliamentarian Dr. Donya Aziz envisions a plan where rural HIV positive women can receive stipends to assist them in traveling to clinics and in paying for their medication.

The Indian representatives want to enforce property rights for women. Women who have AIDS in India, consistently face discrimination because of a stigma of immorality and sexual promiscuity that comes with the disease. Many women who take care of their AIDS ridden husbands until the husbands die, are then thrown out of their in-laws’ house. This practice is illegal. Indian journalist Teresa Rehman and her colleagues plan to contact lawyers who will work on HIV and AIDS and urge them to write a brochure and organize a hotline to give information to women about their property rights.

Add a Comment2 Comments

Thanks for your concern. In any case it is a sad situation, and let's hope that it imrproves with relative speed, thanks to the efforts of the representatives at the conference.
Anna

December 30, 2009 - 4:42pm
EmpowHER Guest
Anonymous

I think there is a whole lot more to this than we can begin to imagine...I am willing to bet this NOT due to men having sex and giving it to their spouses, what about all the children are they all HIV + as well????...I'd start looking into all these forced vaccines and GM foods being shoved down their throats....How do we REALLY know they actually have AIDS in the first place..I can't even begin to imagine that they have all been "tested" and proven to have the disease...besides, how are they all completely bypassing having HIV to going straight to having AIDS??? Of course I am sad and sickened that this is happening in our world, but I think that blaming it on their husbands who are just screwing around, is a pretty shallow response to how this could be happening.

http://www.naturalnews.com/026907_food_vaccination_health.html

http://www.raw-wisdom.com/50harmful.

http://www.seedsofdeception.com/Public/GeneticRoulette/HealthRisksofGMFoodsSummaryDebate/index.cfm

December 30, 2009 - 3:36pm
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