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RESOLUTION 1325
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UGANDA: Women slow to volunteer
for HIV vaccine trials
June 12, 2007 - (PlusNews) Too few Ugandan women
are willing to participate in trials of a potential vaccine against
the HI virus, local scientists have said.
"We have recorded high numbers of them when we invite them
for preparation workshops - at these events we record more women
than men - but when you advance to the stage of taking them on
as [trial] candidates, they duck off and switch off their phones,"
said Dr Hannah Kibuuka, of Makerere University and the Walter
Reed Project.
The project is a partner in the United States Military HIV Research
Programme, which has been jointly conducting two HIV vaccine trials
with the university in Uganda since 2002, with the aim of developing
a vaccine specific to the HIV sub-type prevalent in Uganda.
Kibuuka told IRIN/PlusNews that the main reason women did not
enrol was their lack of autonomy, or dependence on male partners
when making major decisions about their lives.
Another deterrent was that "we enrol women of between 18
and 40 years ... the reproductive age bracket, but we have a requirement
that one must not conceive - culturally, womanhood is judged according
to one's fertility", she said.
Officials at a meeting of women's ministers from 53 Commonwealth
countries in the capital, Kampala, said 30 HIV vaccine trials
were being held in 24 countries across six continents. Developing
countries such as Uganda, where the AIDS pandemic is more serious,
have taken an active role in the search for a vaccine.
Gender imbalance in societies often makes women more vulnerable
than men to contracting HIV, so more research is needed into a
female-oriented prevention strategy that can also empower women.
"Socially women have low ability to negotiate safer sex and
this is riding them into their graves. Studies have indicated
that women in marriage are more at risk and we see microbicides
as the answer that puts women's destiny in their hands,"
said Dr Florence Mirembe, an HIV researcher at Makerere University
and a conference delegate.
Microbicides include a range of products, such as gels, films
and sponges, that "have the potential to prevent HIV infection
in both women and men by creating a mechanical barrier, though
none is yet on the market", she said.
"They are women-controlled and will not need partner consent,"
she added. "It is easier to use than the female condom which
has been difficult to popularise."
The Ugandan Ministry of Health recently announced that it had
stopped distributing female condoms due to low uptake.
Mirembe noted that even with microbicide trials, finding large
numbers of HIV-negative, willing volunteers was a problem, as
was the issue of caring for women who became HIV-positive during
the trials.
Global microbicide trials were dealt a major blow earlier this
year when researchers halted trials of a gel after preliminary
results showed it could increase the risk of HIV infection. Uganda
was one of four countries where the cellulose sulphate gel was
being tested.
From:http://www.plusnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=72689
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