Advocates against HIV

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

BY ANA SANTOS CONTRIBUTOR http://www.manilatimes.net/
Sunday, 03 January 2010 00:00

In a public health clinic in Manila where one can get tested for sexually transmitted diseases including HIV, there is a poster that reads: “This is what someone who can be infected by HIV looks like.” Under this sign is a mirror.

It is a simple but accurate reminder that anyone can be infected by Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), which causes Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS). According to global statistics published in December 2009 by the Joint UN Program on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), since the beginning of the epidemic, almost 60 million people have been infected with HIV and 25 million people have died of HIV-related causes.

According to the AIDS Accountability International Foundation, a global study called “The Scorecard on Women” found that AIDS is now the leading cause of death among women of reproductive age.

The Philippines is still considered a low incidence country with an estimated number of HIV cases amounting to 4,218 registered with the Department of Health’s Philippine HIV and AIDS Registry, as of October 2009.

The numbers may be considered small, and it is easy to continue thinking that HIV/ AIDS happens only in other countries.

But to these advocates whose photos appear here, HIV has a face, albeit in many forms: stigma, discrimination, and sometimes, theirs if they are living with HIV, or that of someone they love who has succumbed to AIDS.

Wearing nothing but the AIDS ribbon, the universally recognized icon of support and empathy for the cause, these advocates have boldly come out to share their personal stories about how they have come face to face with HIV.

They are not professional models. It is their courage—and not any benchmark of physical beauty—that makes them deserving of pictures. And it is their actual life experiences with HIV that has revealed their courage. These men and women know what they are talking about.

The right to live free from stigma and discrimination
It was a year ago when Wanggo Gallaga appeared on national television and disclosed his HIV status. Until now, Gallaga says he continues to get a lot of questions on his social networking site. “Some people even seem to have opened an account just to ask me things like: I had unprotected sex and now I’m beginning to feel sick. Is that how you felt?” he says.

Such questions underscore the need for better access to information on HIV/AIDS, which Gallaga hopes to help address by sharing his own experience with as many people as possible.

“Often times, I am introduced to people and when they hear my name, they tell me they know who I am and that they are proud of what I did. It still amazes me how what I’ve done has affected people. But the best support I get is the fact that I am not treated any differently. I have not been given special treatment and must carry my own weight as before.”

Most important to Gallaga is the difference that personally knowing someone living with HIV makes in others.

“People have told me that my disclosure has helped them realize that it can happen to anyone and that if they have the same lifestyle as I used to have, they are at risk. Some people have told me that they have begun to take better precautions while others have found the courage to take the test. I’ve spoken to a few people who are living with the disease and have started to open up about their condition to close friends and family. To stop living with the secret—I think that’s important as well.”

The right to be free from discrimination at work
It was in Dubai when Jericho Paterno first found out that he was HIV positive. It was a surprise and an unfortunate turn of events for Paterno who dreamt of working abroad to give his family a better life.

“I took the HIV test as part of a preemployment requirement. I was surprised to find that I tested positive. I had never shown signs of being sick,” he recalls. There was little time for Paterno to get over his initial shock, he was immediately quarantined and deported back to the Philippines.

“I was frightened. I knew very little about HIV, and confused it with AIDS. I thought I didn’t have long to live.”

The Coordination of Action Research on AIDS and Mobility (CARAM Asia), a regional nongovernment organization that works on health issues, calls the policy and practice of mandatory testing for migrant workers “discriminatory, dehumanizing and violates migrants’ rights.”

Paterno himself has played an active role in advocating migrant workers’ rights as a member of Pinoy Plus. Paterno has been invited to various international HIV/AIDS conferences in Switzerland and Indonesia to speak about his experience.

“Mandatory testing is just one of the forms of discrimination people living with HIV/AIDS face, there are many others,” opines Paterno.

The right to be responsible for your actions
Carlos Celdran’s youth was marked by living a carefree life in New York City, which he discloses included a bi-sexual lifestyle.

“I was living and working in New York in the 1990s. Back then when you met someone at a bar, the line of questioning was always: ‘What’s your name? What do you do? Where do you live? And are you HIV positive?’ We might have been bit promiscuous, but always careful and used condoms.”

Celdran continues, “There are a lot of advancements that have been made in the field of HIV/AIDS in the last decade, and it’s true that the infection is no longer a death sentence, but it’s not something to be taken lightly either. There are a lot of young people now who don’t protect themselves because they are ignorant or complacent.”

“Don’t be ignorant about HIV; not only to protect yourself, but also the ones around you. HIV affects everyone you love and who love you back.”

The right to voluntary testing and counseling
In 2005, a friend of Romina Nanagas had an “AIDS scare.” He asked her to go with him to get tested.

Being at a STD testing center was not at all what Nanagas thought it would be. “I was really scared. I had this image of the staff immediately judging us as ‘dirty’ or promiscuous, but they were very gentle when they talked to us about our lifestyle choices. They gave us brochures and told us to think about it [getting test] first.”

The professionalism and sensitivity of the counseling made testing and subsequently waiting for the results easier. Nanagas and her friend were relieved to find that he was negative.

Looking back at this experience, Nanagas says, “My friend regularly gets tested now just to be safe. He’s a lot more careful and more knowledgeable. I admire my friend’s bravery in openly telling others, ‘Yes, I got tested for AIDS and you should do the same.’”

In relation to her own life, Nanagas explains, “I’m in PR [public relations]—a business of changing perceptions and building images. HIV/AIDS is a cause where right now, a change of perception about something like getting tested may be life-saving. There’s a misconceptions that HIV/AIDS is a ‘gay disease.’ It’s these misconceptions that make straight people think they don’t need to get tested.”

The right to be free of judgment
Having lived in the US for most of his life, Vince Golangco was certainly exposed to and knowledgeable about messages on HIV/AIDS prevention. “But I did not know anyone who’s living with HIV or AIDS.”

That changed in 2006 when a friend suddenly confided that he had just been diagnosed as HIV positive.
“I was really caught off-guard because there was nothing to indicate that my friend was even sick.”

Despite the knowledge that he had about HIV/AIDS, Golangco realized that there was one thing that he did not know: “What do you say when someone you care about tells you they’re HIV positive?”

And even more dumb-founding for Vince was what not to say. “I wanted to ask, “What now?” and “How serious is it? Or “How much longer do you have?” In the end, Vince decided to just listen and be nonjudgmental because “it seemed to me that he really needed someone to talk to.”

When asked if he was afraid that his being in the photo shoot would create doubts about his sexual orientation, he answered, “No. If people see my picture here and judge then may be they should reeducate themselves on HIV/AIDS, too. It can affect anyone. And I’d like to think I’m doing this for my friend. Doing this will show him that he has my support even from here.”

The right to adequate health support and services
When AJ came back to Manila after a year overseas, the last thing he expected was to receive an e-mail requesting financial assistance to defray his friend’s hospital expenses.

AJ says, “Vin was healthy, a tri-athlete even. I didn’t ask questions. Vin was my friend. I didn’t need to know all the details in order to help.”

“Once when talking to another friend, she said, ‘It is really so difficult when it is AIDS’—pertaining to Vin’s physical pain. I was shocked. Until then, I had no idea what Vin was sick of.”

“When Vin was gone, many questions went through my mind: When did he know he was sick? Were there times when he needed someone to talk to? When was the last time that I saw him and what did we talk about? Did I get to tell him everything I should have said? Because now, I can’t.”

“Vin was the first person with HIV/AIDS I knew who has passed on. I have never before posed publicly for the cameras, but I am doing this now, in memory of a dear friend’s life that was short, but well-lived.”

The right to sexual orientation and gender
Every year, the LGBT (lesbian, gay, bi-sexual and transgender) community takes to the streets for Pride March for two reasons: to continue rallying for their human rights of and to celebrate LGBT life and culture.

Dee, co-founder of the Society of Transsexual Women of the Philippines (STRAP), talks about the reason why she walks in Pride marches. “When I first started to manifest my real gender expression, I was fired from my job and in my desperation to find another I applied for those that were way below my qualifications.”

Her academic credentials and professional experience as a manager were overshadowed by the disparity between the gender on her birth certificate and the gender she chose to express. Lucky for Dee, she found an equal opportunity employer whom she has been with for the last six years. “Society stereotypes us as entertainers, salon personnel, comediennes or prostitutes. There is nothing wrong with these professions,” Dee says, “I just dream of a different one, like everyone else.”

Naomi concurs with this, “When you decide to change something that people think is fundamentally immutable, like gender, you trouble their sense of certainty and stability. Quietly or blatantly, they will resent you for it; or worse they will punish you for it. It is this policing and punishing because of gender expression that marginalizes people like me. Years of discrimination impair our sense of self-worth and many of us agree to this convenient arrangement—us in the margins, the rest of society living a good life.”

Queersilver speaks about the discrimination she faces and which she, as a member of Lesbian Advocates of the Philippines, fights. “We lesbians are a double minority—we’re women and we’re lesbians,” says Queersilver, who stresses that this is the one reason why lesbians are often overlooked when it comes to HIV/AIDS intervention programs. “The WSW [Women who have Sex with Women] may be a low [HIV] incidence group, but we nonetheless should have access to adequate and proper information about how to protect ourselves.”

UAE deports 1,500 HIV sufferers

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

The UAE deported more than 1,500 people with HIV, hepatitis B and C and tuberculosis in 2008, a new report said on Thursday and criticised many countries around the world for failure to protect sick migrants.

Those criticised included the United States, Saudi Arabia, South Korea and South Africa and the report urged governments to commit to the goal of universal access to HIV treatment for all who need it by 2010.

"With 192 million people - or 3 percent of the world's population - living outside their place of birth, ensuring migrants' and deportees' access to HIV treatment is absolutely essential to meeting this goal,” said Titise Kode, who works for African HIV Policy Network, which formed part of the multi-agency group that authored the study.

Saudi Arabia, which has mandatory HIV testing, also came under fire with the report claiming people were detained "for up to a year without access to medication" and HIV-positive migrants were deported.

The report offered no comparative figures for those deported because of HIV or other diseases around the globe or on a year-on-year basis.

"Migrants living with HIV are often explicitly excluded from treatment," said Katherine Todrys, researcher with the Health and Human Rights Division at Human Rights Watch. "If they are detained, they are often denied access to antiretroviral drugs, and then if deported they can’t get care."

The report said national deportation procedures were often insufficient to protect those with HIV from being forced to return to countries where there was a risk of being tortured or subjected to "cruel, inhumane or degrading treatment".

This happens despite long established international human rights and refugee law prohibiting such deportations, the report added.

The report also criticised the United States for poor access to treatment it offered to people in detention centres, as well as the "harsh conditions" and "lack of access to medical treatment for some HIV-positive individuals who are deported".

The multi-agency report was prepared by Human Rights Watch, Deutsche AIDS-Hilfe, the European AIDS Treatment Group and the African HIV Policy Network.

The group called on governments to ensure access to treatment for those awaiting deportation. It also urged the re-examination of deporting those with HIV to countries where treatment and social support structures were inadequate.

"Migrants face enormous risks when they cross borders," said David Hans-Ulrich Haerry, of the European AIDS Treatment Group.

"But they shouldn't face a death sentence for living with HIV when we have effective treatment available and governments worldwide have pledged to provide universal access to antiretroviral medicine and have committed themselves to international treaties that guarantee migrants protection."

Source: http://business.maktoob.com/20090000376082/UAE_deports_1_500_HIV_sufferers/Article.htm

2nd clinical trial for China's HIV/AIDS vaccine

BEIJING, Sept. 27 -- China has conducted its second phase of clinical trials of a vaccine for HIV/AIDS. This is the first time experts are assessing the safety and efficiency of the vaccine in high-risk groups.

More than 230 volunteers took part in this second phase in the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. Scientists are expected to decide, based on results, whether to go ahead with a third phase of trials.

If a third phase is carried out, it will evaluate the vaccine's effectiveness on a large number of people.

China started research on a vaccine for the AIDS virus in 1996.

(Source: CCTV.com)

Coming out positive: Three Filipinos Living with HIV Making a Difference in ICAAP9

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

By Ana Santos, Contributor (Sunday, September 13, 2009)
http://www.manilatimes.net/national/2009/sept/13/yehey/weekend/20090913week1.html

On the surface, Edna, a housewife; Jerico, a former OFW; and Jocelyn, a former waitress in Angeles City, may not seem like they have anything in common.

However different they may seem, there is one distinct point where their lives intertwine-Edna, Jerico and Jocelyn are all living with HIV.

At the recently concluded International AIDS Conference (ICAAP9) in Bali, Indonesia, the 2nd largest AIDS Conference in the world, these three Filipinos came out to share their stories of living with HIV.

Together, the three gave not only a face to the epidemic, but a voice to the everyday realities of living with it.

Edna, housewife and mother Edna, is a 38-year-old housewife.

When she met her husband, Romy, he was a seafarer whose journeys to other lands fascinated her. They married after a few years of dating and Romy continued his job as a seafarer, deployed to various parts of the world for long periods at a time.

Edna says that, at first, it was difficult to have Romy away so much, but after they started having children, it became easier to bear. She busied herself with taking care of the children and being both mother and father to them while Romy was at sea.

While they weren't rich, Edna says that they lived a pretty decent life on Romy's salary.

But in 2004, this all changed.

In that year, Romy met an accident while he was onboard the ship. When he was trying to fix a hydraulic jack, one of the pipes came loose and hit him. Romy was left with a huge wound in his upper abdomen. He was declared unfit to work and sent home when his ship docked in Amsterdam.

Back in the Philippines, Romy was operated on and his blood was tested.

A few weeks later, an epidemiologist told him his blood tested positive for HIV.

The implication of such news was a lot for Edna to bear. Romy thinks that he may have gotten infected during an encounter in Brazil where he had unprotected sex.

But the infidelity soon became the easier burden to bear.

Romy could no longer return to work so Edna had to assume the role of sole breadwinner of the family. In 2007, Edna also tested positive for HIV.

At first, I didn't want to be tested. Romy is the only man I've ever had contact with so I figured that if he was positive, I was positive, too.

According to a UNAIDS study entitled, HIV Transmission in Intimate Partner Relationships in Asia, there are an estimated 1.7 million women in Asia who are living with HIV. The study estimates that 90 percent of these women were infected by their longtime boyfriends or husbands.

However, being a seafarer may have also increased Romy's vulnerability to the virus.

A recent study showed that seafarers are three times more susceptible to the HIV, as compared to the general population.

Being far away from home compounded by the loneliness of being at sea makes seafarers seek offshore recreation through unprotected sexual encounters. Some may maintain a casual relationship with a commercial sex worker in different ports who may in turn be having simultaneous relationships with other male clients. The incidence of multiple concurrent partnerships adds to the seafarers vulnerability to HIV.

Edna's testimony at a forum held by the International Organization on Migration (IOM) was the preface for the launching of a new IOM program whose specific objective is to reduce HIV incidence in the maritime sector.

The program called, Global Partnership on HIV and Mobile Workers in the Maritime Sector is the first global multisectoral partnership that involves employers of seafarers, trade union organizations and international labor groups.

The Philippines, which deploys around 350,000 seafarers and supplies 20 percent of all seafarers globally, has been chosen to be the pilot country for this program.

Other members of this global partnership include: International Committee on Seafarers Welfare, International Labour Organization, International Maritime Health Association, International Shipping Federation and Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS).

Jerico, former OFW

Jerico was just about to live out his dream of working in a foreign country and celebrate his 30th birthday when he found out that he was HIV positive.

It was 2005 and Jerico had just moved to Dubai. He had gotten a job working in a food establishment and a HIV test was a prerequisite for an employment visa.

Even though I had a number of casual unprotected encounters with other men, I wasn't nervous about taking the test. I didn't think HIV was something that would happen to me. When they told me that I was positive, I thought it was the end of the world, recalls Jerico.

Being in a foreign country made matters worse for Jerico. Not only was he away from family and friends, he also had to contend with the HIV policy on migrant workers in a foreign country.

I was put in a quarantine area isolated from the rest of the hospital and then I was deported, he says.

While his dream of working abroad may have come to an end, Jerico found another way to make a difference. As an Area Coordinator of Pinoy Plus, a support group of people living with HIV/AIDS, he conducts pre-departure orientation seminars to OFWs.

Jerico is also a staunch advocate of policies that will protect the rights of migrant workers who are HIV positive. Drawing from his own experience, he has been invited to international conferences to give his personal testimony. Before ICAAP9, Jerico was in Switzerland speaking at a World Health Organization (WHO) forum about his experience.

Sharing my story has helped a lot in my healing. I used to think that I was dying and that there was no hope. I hope that I can be seen as proof that there is life after a positive diagnosis.

At ICAAP9, the Coordination of Action Research on AIDS and Mobility (CARAM Asia), a regional Malaysia-based NGO that investigates migration and health issues, called for the removal of mandatory HIV testing for migrant workers as a condition for entry, stay, or employment in their destination country.

According to CARAM's Asian Report on Mandatory Testing, standard practices such as securing explicit consent, provision of pre-test and post-test counseling, protection of confidentiality are often ignored due to various factors related to large-scale testing of migrants. Furthermore, CARAM called for a stop to the deportation of migrant workers who are HIV+ or have other treatable health conditions.

Jocelyn, former commercial sex worker

Jocelyn had just moved to Angeles City and was only 15 when a friend asked her is she wanted a job as a waitress.

I was very excited because I hadn't finished primary school and there was this opportunity to earn money and help my mother, she recalls.

Jocelyn paid a friend P100 for the use of her birth certificate that to show that she was 18 years old and started working as a waitress serving drinks to American servicemen.

After about a year, a friend introduced Jocelyn to a medicine that she insisted would make her feel good and forget all her problems. Jocelyn took it, not realizing that it was ecstasy.

Before taking ecstasy, Jocelyn says that she never went out with the customers. But once I started taking this medicine, I did not feel shy. I had no fear and felt that I was a strong woman who could take her of herself.

One month after taking ecstasy, Jocelyn lost her virginity.

She continued going out with customers after that. Jocelyn says that she started to earn a lot more money and for the first time in their life, she was eating three meals a day.

As part of the bars policy, Jocelyn underwent a smear test to check against STIs every week and an HIV anti-body test every six months.

In 1991, she got pregnant with her first son. She was only 17 years old. It was also the year when Mount Pinatubo erupted and all the American Air Force men moved out of Angeles City-including the father of Jocelyn's child.

Jocelyn decided to stop working to look after her son, but the difficulty of making ends meet as a single parent made her decide to go back to the bar in January 1994.

In March of that same year, she took an HIV anti body test even though she had had no partner for over a year. A couple of days later, she shared one night with a serviceman and became pregnant.

Jocelyn was told that she was HIV positive when she was pregnant with her second child.

I was terrified that my child would also be positive, but no one could give me any information. At the time, people had so many misconceptions about HIV. They wanted to burn people who had it, Jocelyn confesses.

Jocelyn says that she experienced discrimination and was treated as an outcast even by her own family when she told them that she had HIV. My brother wouldn't eat at the same table with me. He was afraid that he would get infected if he shared my glass or utensils.

She attributes the lack of understanding and information about HIV as the incendiary factor that nurses and provokes this discrimination.

My brother eventually made peace with me after he saw a woman living with HIV on TV.

In 2004, Jocelyn began working as a peer educator in a social hygiene clinic in Angeles City. Everyday she conducts seminars on STIs and HIV prevention for the new women from the provinces who come to Angeles City to work in the bars. The seminars are requirement for a work certificate.

On certain days, Jocelyn also provides counseling for women diagnosed with HIV.

Jocelyn is also part of Sister Plus, small group of HIV positive women in Angeles. Last year, they received funding and started a livelihood program. Every woman who is a member is entitled to receive P50,000; P20,000 for burial expenses that is really funny and P30,000 to start a small business, she explains.

Jocelyn used the money to put up a small sari-sari store in her house.

After much inner turmoil and guilt for possibly passing on the infection to her second son, in 2005, Jocelyn finally had him tested. She was relieved to find out that he was negative.

Now my life is some much better than before. It was a hard life, but I am happy because I feel like I have broken through a wall, says Jocelyn. I have no regrets.

Jocelyn's story, as told here, is featured in a book entitled Diamonds a compilation of 10 stories of women living with HIV in the Southeast Asia Region. The story of a 12-year-old girl from India is also included in the book.

Diamonds is published by the women's working groups of APN+ (Asia Pacific Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS) in collaboration with UNIFEM (United Nations Development Fund for Women).

The book also has a DVD version with the same title.

A book launch and a DVD screening were done for the first time at ICAAP9.

During the launch, writer/editor Susan Paxton said, Ten years ago, very few people would come out and say that they were HIV+. Most of the time, the ones who would speak about it were men. Diamonds is monumental because now, we not only have live testimonials with faces, but testimonials from these very brave women living with HIV.

CARAM Asia Successfully Raises The Concerns of Migrants At 9th ICAAP

Friday, August 21, 2009

CARAM Asia is pleased to announce its successful participation in the recent 9th International Congress on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific (ICAAP) which was held in Bali from the 9th -13th of August. It is a testimony to the campaigning of CARAM Asia and its members that migrant voices were included in the process as the congress for ICAAP had initially overlooked the link between HIV and migration.

CARAM Asia’s activities were vast and significant throughout the conference and these included hosting a Migrant Forum to hear from migrant workers discussing their own experiences and drawing up recommendations related to HIV/AIDS and mobility for the congress.

Furthermore, TFEM launched a new book Living With Hope documenting individual stories of migrants in some seven different countries. This launch was attended by a number of prominent guests including Anand Grover the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Health, Prasada Rao Director of UNAIDS Regional Support Team in Asia and the Pacific and Caitlin Wiesen the UNDP Regional Centre HIV/AIDS Practise Leader Program Coordinator for Asia and the Pacific.

Another of our key events was a skills building session entitled Empowering Migrant Communities Through Participatory Action Research (PAR) which saw the release of a new publication by the SOH program team.

As well as the aforementioned activities CARAM Asia and its members also participated in a number of other sessions related to mobility, gender and risk assessment in combating HIV transmission. This coupled with our own core activities helped further raise awareness on issues such as mandatory testing and HIV travel restrictions.

A full report documenting CARAM Asia’s activities at the 9th ICAAP will soon be released for public consumption on our website.