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RETHINKING AIDS AS SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY: Report
of a Workshop at the Asian Social Forum January 2003, Hyderabad, India
Dialogues on Strategies for AIDS Control in India/South Asia
Organised by: Swasthya Panchayat ¡V Lokayan 13, Alipur Road,
Delhi-110054
Centre for the Study of Developing Societies 29, Rajpur Road,
Delhi-110054
ActionAid India -88, N.D.S.E.-II, New Delhi - 110049
Acknowledgements
All of us owe a debt to the organising committee of the Asian Social
Forum for providing the opportunity to organise such a workshop and
relate to wider issues and socially committed people.
I am grateful for the trust reposed in me by Prof. Dhirubhai Sheth and
Vijay Pratap of the Centre for the Study of Developing as well as Shri
Harsh Mander and Sandeep Chachra of Action Aid-India. Their active
support in suggesting and mobilizing speakers as well as organising the
logistical support merits a big thank you.
Without the active involvement of the participants, the workshop could
not have been as enriching as it was. The enthusiasm of all the speakers
when initially approached gave me the energy to persist in the endeavour
of organising this workshop and I am grateful to them for giving their
serious input and time.
The Concept Note
Rethinking AIDS Control Strategies: Social Responsibility, Pluralism and
Mutuality for Optimising Social and Medical Interventions
AIDS control efforts reflect the best and the worst face of
globalisation. How are the dual sides manifest in relation to AIDS and
how can we capitalise on the positive and counter the negative
implications? These are the central concerns while conceptualizing the
workshop. Discussions will be focussed on the issue of creating a
conducive macro-environment for:
(i) Care and Support for People Living with HIV/AIDS in India/South
Asia, highlighting the reasons for the problems being faced by the
PLWHAs and how to overcome them, and
(ii) The notion of Responsible Sexuality for control of HIV
transmission.
The massive mobilization that occurred globally to deal with this health
problem so early after its recognition in human populations is
unprecedented for any disease. The use of ¡¥human rights¡¦ so centrally
in AIDS discourse is also for the first time in relation to any disease
control programme. Both these are positive elements of the AIDS control
efforts.
However, the violation of rights of the affected groups in the South
Asian context, despite the proclaimed pursuit of human rights, reflect
the negative elements. Stories in the newspapers, experiences recounted
by HIV positive persons and medical colleagues, all tell of how doctors
turn away patients who are HIV positive, using some pretext or other to
avoid treating them. Worse still, many are told by the doctor that they
should just go home to die! The public health system is often
unreachable by patients and when reached, is unable to provide adequate
treatment for the opportunistic infections they suffer from time to time
(like T.B., fungal infections, diarrhoeas, pneumonia etc.) due to lack
of drugs.
The community often stops interacting with, if not actively ostracising,
persons known to be HIV positive. Even the programme which talks of
¡¥rights¡¦ and ¡¥de-stigmatisation¡¦ does ¡¥targetting¡¦ of socially
marginalised groups. While the condition of women in prostitution has
become an area of concern (which is a long overdue issue needing
attention), their numbers are increasing rapidly and girls of younger
age are being brought into the trade as a direct fallout of the focus on
¡¥sex workers¡¦ as spreaders of HIV. Efforts at awareness raising¡¦
about AIDS added to the stigma rather than decreasing it.
Some widely recognised questions, which are often not answered, arise
from such negative outcomes
¡P Why have we promoted the fear and stigma through our IEC?
¡P fnWhy was care and support a low priority for the programme?
¡P fnWhy have the medical professionals not been trained to respond to
HIV
¡¥scientifically¡¦ and ¡¥rationally?
¡P fnfnWhy is ¡¥gender sensitivity¡¦ not an issue for the progamme?
All this and many more such issues pose challenges for AIDS control
efforts today. They make it imperative that we rethink the conceptual
basis and value positions that underlie and shape the larger approach of
AIDS control.
It can be argued that these negative elements stem from the monolithic,
homogenising nature of the response shaped by perspectives of the
¡¥north¡¦. It has isolated HIV/AIDS from other public health problems,
promoted technological and managerial solutions ignoring the social and
culturally rooted humanistic dimensions (such as emphasising condoms
while ignoring responsible relationships, focusing on anti-retroviral
drugs and ignoring access to treatment of opportunistic infections or
simple ways of preventing them, promoting disposable syringes ignoring
the practice of universal precautions by the medical system, or
behaviour change through ¡¥communication techniques¡¦ without addressing
the structural causes of vulnerability to HIV). It promotes neo-liberal
and market-friendly perspectives not only in the biomedical sphere of
drugs and medical equipment but also in the social sphere, such as the
commodification of women as sex objects. This is at the cost of a
holistic a!
pproach suited to the local social, economic and health situation.
Lack of accountability to local peoples and undermining of a sense of
responsibility towards any relationship as a social value can be viewed
as a major source of these negative outcomes. From the global, to the
national, to the community, and the individual HIV/AIDS prevention and
care demands ¡¥responsibility¡¦ while the dominant AIDS discourse uptil
now has only undermined its validity. ¡¥Human Rights¡¦ as individual
freedom has been the value frame and ¡¥Responsibility¡¦ has been posed
in opposition to it.
Recognizing the central importance of ¡¥Human Rights¡¦ in AIDS
discourse, a basic proposition, which is open for discussion at the
workshop, is that in addition to Human Rights an environment of ¡¥Social
Responsibility¡¦ is essential for care and support to PLWHAs as well as
for practice of responsible sexual behaviours. However ¡¥Social
Responsibility¡¦ can become patronising and coercive, therefore also
essential is the idea and practice of ¡¥Pluralism as a social asset¡¦
as well as ¡¥Mutuality of responsibility¡¦ in the various related
spheres. The challenge is how to knit them together and translate them
into ground reality in the South Asian context.
What would Social Responsibility mean when knit together with Human
Rights and Pluralism in the specific context of HIV/AIDS in South Asia?
In the era of globalisation, can it help us rethink the responsibility
of the following:--fn
¡P fnthe state towards wellbeing of its citizens,
¡P fnthe public health system towards society for providing
epidemiologically
rational and socially contextualised democratic programmes,
¡P the medical system and professionals towards the patients,
¡P the media communicators towards socialization processes,fn
¡P fnthe community towards its members, andfn
¡P fnpartners in interpersonal relationships including sexual
relationships.
Care and support of PLWHAs and the practice of ¡¥Responsible sexuality¡¦
at individual level can be envisaged only in an environment where social
responsibility is also evident in other spheres. The challenge is to
develop an environment of social responsibility without a constriction
of creativity, diversity or individual freedom and wellbeing. We hope
the discussions will help us all develop our ideas for promoting a
societal environment that effectively minimises the suffering caused by
AIDS and its control strategies. Such a conceptualisation challenges the
very basis of present day globalisation. Any vision of ¡¥Another Asia¡¦
can become ¡¥Possible¡¦ only through tangible alternatives to dealing
with people¡¦s problems.
¡V Ritu Priya
E-mail: <ritupriya@vsnl.com>
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