Nigeria Must
Reduce Infection In Adolescents To Be HIV-free – Umoh
Mr.
Francis Umoh is the Programme Manager, Positive Action for Treatment
Access (PATA), Lagos who was in charge of a two-week national mentorship
and leadership training programme for Adolescents Living with HIV
in Nigeria (ALHIV) with the support of UNICEF in collaboration with
the Lagos State AIDS Control Agency (LSACA). In an interview with CHIOMA
UMEHA, Umoh discusses the purpose of the just-ended vacation training
and how about 196,000 Nigerian adolescents living with HIV can have
improved health and quality of life. Excerpts:
Can you give details of the just-ended
national mentorship and leadership training programme for Adolescents
Living with HIV in Nigeria (ALHIV) organized by PATA?
The
event promotes access to HIV treatment education, care and services;
advocate for access to affordable, qualitative diagnostic and monitoring
tests, drugs and commodities to treat HIV and its attendant problems.
Our youth mentorship and leadership programme is for adolescents aged
between 10 and 19 living with HIV. It is usually a summer programme and is
done during their long vacation. The idea is to bring together
adolescents from different states, to promote team bonding.
This programme enables them meet with other peers from other states,
share experiences and bond as a group. We also seized the opportunity to
educate them on sexual reproductive health issues. They were supposed to
be 54 from seven states, but, we had 50 adolescents from Kaduna,
Federal Capital Territory, Abuja, Akwa Ibom, Benue, Anambra and Lagos in
this year’s event. One of the states was unavoidable absent. We also had
their care-givers with them; the aim was to ensure that they take
their drugs.
Are these adolescents aware of their
status?
Most
of them are, but not all of them are aware of their status, because not
all of them got it from their parents. Some may be positive, but their
parents will not tell them. However, part of the criteria for this
programme is – knowing your HIV status, because at the camp
we mention issues of HIV openly and we don’t want anybody to be
embarrassed. But, they are not openly positive because we maintain issues
of confidentiality.
What are the challenges of adolescents
living with HIV?
One
of their challenges is the issue of access to treatment. The drugs are
there,though, sometimes we have isolated cases of stock out at the clinic.
However, the adolescents lack access to available drugs. Also,we see cases
of stigmatisation, for instance, we have seen cases where
the children were denied admission because of their status. We have
some that have been thrown out of their house because of their status. In
some cases, their parents are dead and their relatives tried to take them
in, but when they discovered their status, they threw them away.
In
PATA, we have home for this type of cases called ‘Mary’s Home’, named
after the first adolescent diagnosed with HIV. We have about five
adolescents living in the home right now. The home caters for
their accommodation, feeding, health and other needs, and ensures
that they can live a normal life. So stigma is still strong in
Nigeria. The next issue is that of limited access to information
on sexual reproductive health and HIV. We did a research some years
ago and we found out that many adolescents with HIV have poor knowledge of
HIV compared to their negative peers, so some of them don’t have basic information. Also,
some of them experience sexual urge, so they need capacity building on
issues of sexuality and reproductive health.They also need information on
their future careers, so these are some of the issues.
What are the ways to reach out to the
unidentified adolescents living with HIV?
Part
of the campaign going on is to promote HIV testing and uptake for
adolescents. It is only when you test that you can know if the person is
positive or negative, so there is a serious campaign to promote testing
and then uptake of service for the positive ones. Right now the whole
world is talking about 90-90- 90 treatment target by year 2020, and
HIV-free generation by 2030. For us to achieve that, about 20 million have
to be tested, the 20 million diagnosed people have to be on drugs and
the 20 million on drugs should have a suppressed viral load. So for
Nigeria to achieve this global target there must be massive HIV testing
and uptake for adolescents. The only way to do this is to go out to
these adolescents, not expect them to come to you. Most importantly, when
they are tested positive, they need to be provided with treatment.
How do you go about the issue of
follow-up?
During
testing and counselling, of course their basic data are collected and they
are linked to service, but, one challenge they have is transiting from
paediatric to adult care. This is still a big issue. In Nigeria, once you
are 15, you transit to adult clinic but, you know at 15 the child
is not yet a full adult. So you have a case of children that is used
to paediatric clinic, and instead of transiting the child to adolescent
clinic, you move the child straight to adult. This sometimes causes loss
to follow-up, because when they get there and see only adults, they get
scared and leave. One way to solve this is to have a day or time set
aside to attend to the adolescents; there should be that platform
for adolescents. On our part, we have tried to solve this case by
peer mentorship where the peers counsel their peers on transitioning.
Also, we have issue of poor attitude of caregivers. Though, this is improving,
but, the caregivers need to know that an adolescent might not react the
way an adult does, so you have to be patient with them.
Does poverty affect access to treatment?
Although
treatment is free, poverty indirectly affects uptake of treatment, but,
this is also related to stigma and discrimination. We have situation where
clients have a treatment Centre close to them, but, because of fear
of stigma, they go to a far treatment centre. In this case transport
fare becomes an issue. Also, when we talk about comprehensive access
to treatment, it goes beyond having drugs; you have to have a lab
test done, checkups including, viral loads and even nutrition. So, all
these involve money. If you are taking your drugs and you are not eating
well or in school, this affects the children psychologically. So, yes
poverty is still an issue.
Do you think Nigeria is having more
cases of adolescents with HIV?
Yes
it is increasing. As at 2014, according to UNICEF, 160,000 adolescents
aged between 10 and19 were living with HIV/AIDS in Nigeria, in 2013 about
11,000 died, while 17,000 were infected. Although, the issue of
mother to child infection is being checked, sometimes, you see some
women accessing antenatal care, but when they want to deliver, they drop
out and go to a Traditional Birth Attendant (TBA) this leads to more
mother-to-child infection. Nigeria needs to improve on our
accountability and transparency in implementing the programme, so that service
gets down to the people that matter. There is also need for capacity
building for adolescents and service-friendly services.
This story was published in Independent on Sep 7, 2016
http://independentnig.com/poor-funding-hinders-malaria-research-nimr/
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