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From: Lindsay Menard-Freeman [ profile ]
Subject: Drought and HIV - a dangerous combination
Sent: Jul 29th, 2011 - 12:27:33

  Drought and HIV - a dangerous
combination
****

More than 11.6 million people are facing starvation in the Horn of Africa,
and as aid agencies struggle to feed them, experts are warning that a lack
of food could have wider consequences, including jeopardizing the health of
people on HIV treatment. Here are some ways the drought could affect people
living with HIV and hamper prevention efforts. (East Africa) (28 Jul)****

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http://mymediaq.com/viewclip.aspx?gid=0f81b59d-323e-4152-bd94-1d317aa72864**
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HORN OF AFRICA: Drought and HIV - a dangerous combination NAIROBI, 28 July
2011 (PlusNews) - More than 11.6 million people are facing starvation in the
Horn of Africa, and as aid agencies struggle to feed them, experts are
warning that a lack of food could have wider consequences, including
jeopardizing the health of people on HIV treatment.


Here are some ways the drought could affect people living with HIV and
hamper prevention efforts:

*Food insecurity** *- To maintain the same body weight and level of physical
activity, asymptomatic HIV-positive people need an increase of 10 percent in
energy, according to the UN World Health
Organization.
This proportion can rise to 20-30 percent for symptomatic adults and as high
as 50-100 percent for HIV-positive children experiencing weight loss.

Lack of food is a widely acknowledged barrier to successful antiretroviral
therapy; a 2010 Ugandan
study
found that ARVs increased respondents' appetite. They also reported that
the side-effects of ARVs - including headaches, stomach pain, dizziness,
shivers, loss of energy, fainting, and rapid heartbeat - were exacerbated
without food.

Many participants felt they should either abandon their ARVs or delay
initiation until they could afford a more nutritious diet. Research shows
that earlier initiation
on ART significantly improves survival rates of people living with HIV.

HIV-positive mothers may be forced to use a mix of breast milk and solid
food for babies who ideally should be exclusively
breastfed
to cut down the risk of transmission.

*Access to safe water** *- Pastoralist communities often end up sharing
water with animals, putting them at higher risk of contracting water-borne
diseases.

HIV-positive people find it harder to resist or recover from diarrhoeal
diseases, skin conditions and other opportunistic infections. ****

*Read more*

[image: http://www.irinnews.org/images/design/page.gif] UGANDA: As food
prices bite, hungry HIV-positive people turn to kitchen
gardens
****

[image: http://www.irinnews.org/images/design/page.gif] KENYA: Food
shortages threaten ARV
adherence
****

[image: http://www.irinnews.org/images/design/page.gif] LESOTHO: A desire to
learn stifled by hunger
****

[image: http://www.irinnews.org/images/design/page.gif] KENYA: Hungry
HIV-positive mothers wary of
breastfeeding
****

[image: http://www.irinnews.org/images/design/page.gif] ETHIOPIA: Feeding
family unity ****

In addition, people with HIV may be too weak to walk long distances to
collect and carry water; homes headed by children orphaned through HIV or
older people may also be incapable of accessing safe water.

The UN recommends that each
person use 20-50 litres of water every day for drinking, cooking and
cleaning.

*Sexual violence* - Women do the bulk of housework in much of the Horn of
Africa, including fetching water and firewood. Girls and women risk being
sexually assaulted on the long walks to fetch water.

For refugees walking or hitch-hiking from Somalia to neighbouring Kenya, the
risk of rape is very real. The NGO CARE
International
reported on 12 July that the number of reports of sexual and gender-based
violence in Kenya's Dadaab refugee camp - where an estimated 3,500 Somalis
are arriving daily - had increased from 75 between January and June 201 to
358 during the same period in 2011.

According to CARE, the most dangerous time for women - many of whom are
travelling alone with their children - is when they are on the move.
Overcrowding in refugee camps also makes it more difficult for regular
protection mechanisms to work.

Post-exposure prophylaxis may be available at camps like Dadaab, but
awareness is poor and many rapes go unreported.

*Transactional sex* - During humanitarian emergencies, desperate women often
turn to desperate measures
to feed themselves and their families.

A 2007 study by the Overseas Development
Institute
in Kenya's chronically arid northeastern Turkana area found that the
effects of drought led many young women and orphans to turn to sex work to
survive.

The study found that as many Turkana people moved to new areas - usually
urban and semi-urban - the separation from their families and communities
made it easier to have transactional sex.

Where condoms are not readily available or regularly used, transactional sex
can increase the risk of contracting HIV.

*Migration** *- According to the International Organization for
Migration
(IOM), migration itself is not a risk to health, but "the migration process
can increase vulnerabilities to poor health, especially for migrants who
move involuntarily, fleeing natural disasters or humanitarian crises, or
those who find themselves in irregular or exploitative conditions".

IOM says many of the underlying factors that cause migration - including
uneven distribution of resources and socio-economic instability - also
determine the increased risk of migrants and their families to HIV
infection. ****

Female migrants are at particular risk of being sexually exploited and
coerced into sex in exchange for food, shelter or even by unscrupulous
police officers threatening them with arrest or deportation.

For people on treatment, abrupt movement to new areas can cause problems for
adherence, as stigma can prevent people from seeking services at unfamiliar
health centres.

*Access to HIV services* - With millions of people on the verge of
starvation, limited health services in the Horn of Africa are stretched to
capacity, and people living with HIV may not get the attention they need
from overburdened health workers.

Many people living with HIV rely on networks for support; during an
emergency these may break up as members move away in search of food and
others succumb to hunger or illness. Home-based care networks may also
collapse or become weakened by the effects of drought.

Illegal refugees may
not have access to HIV and other health services; many fear the consequences
of registering at national hospitals, lest they be discovered and deported.
Not understanding local languages in the host country can also mean refugees
miss out on vital information on HIV/AIDS prevention, treatment and care.

kr/mw****

*Theme (s):** *Early Warning ,
Food Security , Health &
Nutrition , HIV/AIDS
(PlusNews) , PWAs/ASOs -
PlusNews ,****

[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]**
**

** **

** **

Susana T. Fried****

Senior Gender Advisor****

United Nations Development Programme****

HIV/AIDS Practice****

Bureau for Development Policy****

304 East 45th Street, FF-1182****

New York, NY 10017****

Tel: (212) 906 5074****

Fax: (212) 906 5023****

www.undp.org****

** **

[image: cid:image001.png (at) 01CB1EBF.FEF95110]****

** **



--
Susana T. Fried, Ph.D.
E-mail: susana.fried (at) gmail.com
Phone/USA: +1 718 791 6863
Fax: + 1 419 791-6864

This message has been sent through the International Sexual and Reproductive
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--
Lindsay Menard-Freeman
Program Officer
Global Youth Coalition on HIV/AIDS, a program of TakingITGlobal

www.gyca.org
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(T): +212.661.6111
(E): lindsay (at) gyca.org

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GYCA is a youth-led global network of over 5,500 young leaders and adult
allies working on youth and HIV/AIDS in 173 countries world-wide. GYCA's
mission is to empower young leaders with the skills, knowledge, resources
and opportunities they need to scale up HIV/AIDS interventions amongst their
peers.



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