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RESOLUTION 1325
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RWANDA: HIV/AIDS PROJECT REGISTERS
HIGH ACCEPTANCE RATE - UNICEF
April 8, 2004 (IRIN) A pilot project in Rwanda on the prevention
of mother-to-child HIV infection has registered a high rate of acceptance
and has helped improve the chances of HIV positive mothers giving
birth to HIV negative children, the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF)
reported on Tuesday.
Rwanda is one of eight pilot countries in eastern and southern Africa
to have participated in the project in 1999, involving trials for
use of antiretrovirals (ARVs) to minimise the possibility of HIV
infection from mother to child.
"At the start of the trial UNICEF did not know whether mothers
would agree to be tested for HIV when they attended antenatal clinics,"
UNICEF reported. "If they tested positive, would they accept
preventive treatment for their unborn babies by going onto a course
of ARVs before during and after the birth?"
The head of UNICEF's HIV/AIDS programme, Dr Robert Limlim, was quoted
as saying: "By December 2000 it was clear that we had a very
high rate of acceptance. More than 95 percent of the mothers were
tested. And more than 85 percent of the ones who were positive agreed
to join the programme."
He added: "Even more exciting were the initial results of the
programme. Two years after its inception only 3.8 percent of the
children born to HIV-positive mothers were infected. Had there been
no intervention, the rate of infection among the newborn babies
would have averaged 25 percent."
UNICEF reported that based on these results, it would expand the
programme to health centres.
UNICEF supports 14 of the 54 prevention-of-mother-to-child-transmission
(PMTCT) sites across the country. The sites are run by the Rwandan
government. The PMTCT programme is at one with UNICEF's core objective
of child survival and healthy development, UNICEF reported.
"Alongside nationwide testing for pregnant mothers, UNICEF's
goal is to ensure that at least four out of five HIV-positive mothers
and their babies are treated with antiretrovirals. By 2006 at least
70 percent of mothers on the programme should have access to a carting
support network of counselling, home visits, information on how
to manage AIDS-related diseases and support from their community,"
UNICEF said.
Meanwhile, Amnesty International issued a report on Tuesday to coincide
with events marking the 10th anniversary of the genocide in Rwanda
in which it said women continued to die from diseases related to
HIV/AIDS, which some of them contracted as a result of rape during
the genocide.
"Ten years later, the consequences of the violence have not
been dealt with adequately, neither by the international community
nor by the Rwandan government," Amnesty said in the report
focusing on the impact of sexual violence perpetrated during the
genocide.
Amnesty said survivors of rape and their families faced human rights
violations that themselves led to more violations.
"Survivors of sexual violence may have contracted HIV/AIDs,
as a result of which they and their families often face stigma,
which can in turn lead to loss of employment, difficulty in asserting
property rights and a loss of civil and political rights,"
Amnesty reported.
[The full Amnesty International report is available online at: www.amnesty.org]
From: http://allafrica.com/stories/200404080032.html
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