By Ann Zulu
AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF), Coalition of Zambian
Women Living with HIV/AIDS (COZWHA) and Network of the Zambian People living
with HIV/AIDS (NZP+) have pledged to strengthen HIV health services delivery to
adolescent girls, young women and women in Zambia.
The three organisations made the pledge when they
signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) in Lusaka yesterday.
AHF National Medical Director Brig Gen Lawson Simapuka
observed that adolescent girls, young women and women were more vulnerable to
HIV.
Brig Gen. Simapuka noted that although Zambia’s HIV
incidence rate had gone down, women had continued to be at risk of acquiring
HIV, stressing that statistics indicate that the incidence rate was high among
women and girls.
“Since the start of the global HIV epidemic, in many
regions, women have remained at a much higher risk of HIV infection than men.
Young women and adolescent girls in particular, account for a disproportionate
number of new HIV infections among young people living with HIV.
“This trend has continued while in other population
groups the epidemic has been halted and infection rates have significantly
reduced. Young women and adolescent girls acquire HIV five to seven years
earlier than young men, and in some countries HIV prevalence among young women
and adolescent girls is as much as seven times than that of their male
counterparts,” Brig. Simapuka.
He feared that without early interventions to
address the trend, a new window for another HIV epidemic might open.
Brig. Simapuka pledged that AHF Zambia would offer
financial and other forms of support for the various progressive interventions
by the three organisations.
“The MoU is expected to facilitate for the
enhancement and better reach of HIV testing and prevention services across
Zambia and AHF will offer financial and other forms of support,” he said.
Speaking earliar, COZWHA Representative Stella
Chinkuli noted that the MoU had come at a time when the world was searching for
ways of reducing HIV infections among women, the youth and adolescents in
Zambia, through information dissemination, HIV testing, sensitisation, condom
distribution, drama among others.
Ms. Chinkuli indicated that her organisation chose
to work with women is because they have a stronger voice and are the backbone
of health in communities.
“In this MOU, COZWHA will targets to reach
adolescent girls aged between 10 and 19, young women between 19 and 24 and
other women that are both living with HIV and those that test negative by sensitizing
them on HIV testing, treatment and prevention.
And NZP+ director Kunyima Banda said her
organisation would be strategic in facilitating linkages into care for the
people living with HIV in different parts of the country where it operates
from.
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