Health action with informed and engaged societies
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HIV/AIDS and the International Community Response

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as presented at the VIII Communication for Development Roundtable, Managua, Nicaragua

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Summary

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There has been complacency...

  • Limited impact in some of the North ---> late recognition of HIV/AIDS destructive epidemic potential impact elsewhere (Africa, India, China, ex-Soviet Union..) ---> limited funding
  • Will be with us for decades - maybe centuries
  • Complexities - modes of transmission, fear, stigma, sex, long incubation, vulnerabilities...
  • Difficulties & politics in developing vaccines/ cures - different strains/side effects/interests
  • Non-optimal co-ordination among all partners
  • Youth: a window of opportunity… not fully opened


But advocacy has been at work...

  • From the “health box” to UNAIDS..
  • Today: greater commitment and energy than for many years
  • Reduction in the price on anti-retroviral drugs
  • Okinawa G8 2000; Durban 2000; Abuja Declaration April 2001; UNSG role; UN Special Session 2001; movement/meetings of PLWA; Southern NGOs; the Global Fund...
  • UNGASS 2002 will focus on HIV/AIDS & define specific follow-up mechanisms & responsibilities


Declaration of Commitment on HIV/AIDS June 2001,

UN Special Session on HIV/AIDS

  • Ensure that people everywhere - particularly the young - know what to do to avoid infection;
  • Stop mother-to-child transmission
  • Provide treatment to all those infected
  • Redouble the search for a vaccine & a cure
  • Care for those affected - esp. 13 million orphans


to be achieved through...

  • Leadership by governments - in terms of personal commitment & concrete actions
  • Focus on prevention - esp. Youth & MTCT
  • Care, support & treatment - at family & community levels
  • Eliminate discrimination - people affected, girls and women's rights
  • Reduce vulnerability that places individuals & groups at risk
  • Provide supportive environment for orphans, girls & boys affected/infected
  • Address the social & economic impact of HIV/AIDS on individuals, families, communities
  • Accelerate research on vaccines/cure
  • Develop & implement strategies relevant to emergency situations
  • Increase resources to 7-10 billion/year by 2005


We have the instrument... What will it take to make it work?

  • Facilitate local ownership & action
  • De facto co-ordination of all partners at global, regional, country levels
  • Pro-active & sustained advocacy from the international community to identify funds, sustain local/regional initiatives, stimulate ‘reluctant' governments, keep up the momentum
  • Rigorous follow up on the goals established - use of indicators


UNICEF focus over the next 5 years

  • Within its right-based approach….
  • UNICEF new Medium Term Strategic Plan 2002-2005: HIV/AIDS is one of five corporate priorities
  • A new HIV/AIDS Team created (under the leadership of M. Stirling) reporting to UNICEF Executive Director
  • New posts created at HQ & field offices
  • New Communication posts at HQs


Aim and priorities: strengthen capacities within families, communities and nations to prevent HIV infection and care for those infected or affected by HIV/AIDS

  • Prevent HIV infection among young people
  • Prevent mother to child transmission of HIV
  • Care for children, young people & parents living with HIV/AIDS
  • Care for orphans & children in families made vulnerable by HIV/AIDS


within these priorities:

  • Prevention among young people will be at the core of UNICEF global response to HIV/AIDS


What are the communication challenges?

  • In terms of advocacy: lobby with governments about the need to focus on youth & their participation
  • Need for accurate audience analysis
  • In programmatic terms: need for holistic communication approaches - competencies
  • ... within a holistic approach to prevention & care involving all players







In summary...

  • Advocacy has been used successfully in a number of programmes
  • Challenge: partners coordination and sustained effort - in presence of many priorities
  • Use private sector
  • Youth: go beyond rhetoric
  • Indicators exists - but advocacy efforts are rarely based on sound research or rigorously evaluated