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Stigma
and Discrimination: Field Experiences and Research from Africa, Asia &
Ukraine
Women & Stigma
http://www.comminit.com/stunicefstigma/sld-4197.html
“A woman will never decide to do the testing. If she finds herself
HIV-positive she is signing three deaths: psychological death, social
death & physical death. Don’t you think that is a lot?”
-Woman, Burkina Faso-
The rights & choices of HIV-positive women are repeatedly ignored or
denied
Policy frameworks to support their rights are often weak; and the
needs of HIV-positive women are almost always secondary to the rest of
the community
Stigma was reported everywhere to be more directed at women
Stigma surrounding MTCT prevents women from accepting testing and
negatively impacts their quality of family life
In many cases, once a woman is diagnosed as HIV-positive, she faces
rebuke or condemnation for wanting a child, and often is denied the
right to make her own reproductive choices
The “M” in PMTCT can foster incorrect perceptions that a women is solely
at fault in transmitting HIV to her baby
In some cases this enables the partner & family to refuse
responsibility in providing care & support to mother & child
Many communities assume HIV-positive women must be promiscuous, making
it impossible for many women to remain in their communities where they
may have better access to home-based care & support, pushing them into
urban poverty & often into sex work In some communities, women who do
not breastfeed their child are now assumed to be HIV-positive
For more information, contact:
Waithira Gikonyo
Programme Communication Officer
wgikonyo@unicef.org
OR
Shari Cohen
PMTCT Communication Consultant
scohen@cts.com
Email:
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