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I Am 29 And Infected With HIV, Take Care, People

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  • I Am 29 And Infected With HIV, Take Care, People

    I AM 29 AND INFECTED WITH HIV, TAKE CARE, PEOPLE

    Armenpress
    Oct 6, 2005

    YEREVAN, OCTOBER 6, ARMENPRESS: "I am 29 years old. I was infected
    with HIV when using a syringe to inject drugs in Russia. I began
    having health problems caused by infectious hepatitis and went for
    a medical examination.

    After examining me the doctor suggested that I also undergo an
    HIV test.

    When they told me the test was positive I did not want to live,
    I wanted to shut myself off from people, I was afraid that I could
    infect my family. I was pacified only after learning how HIV or AIDS
    is transmitted from one person to another. I do not want people to
    know about my disease because I am afraid of their discrimination,
    of being rejected by the society that considers it 'shameful'.

    This is one story from a book compiled by HIV/AIDS carriers, called
    'We Too Want to Live'. The stories are all different but the plight
    and fears of these people are the same - how to live with HIV, how to
    pacify their hearts, especially when they have children, but are afraid
    to have them examined fearing they may also test positive. HIV/AIDS
    carriers in Armenia lead a secret life and often even their closest
    relatives are unaware of their disease. The majority are men who became
    infected through intravenous drug injection, but statistics show an
    alarming tendency of growth in the number of women with HIV. This
    situation is a result of women's physical and social vulnerability,
    lack of knowledge about HIV/AIDS and the high-risk behavior of their
    husbands and partners, many of who come home from Russia where they
    had gone looking for work.

    A local non-governmental organization called 'Real World, Real People',
    established in 2003, has brought together volunteers who want to help
    people living with HIV. Members of this organization provide them
    with social, legal and psychological assistance. Hovhannes Madoyan,
    the chairman of the organization, says: "The more we worked with
    these people the better we began to understand that people with HIV
    could provide psychological assistance to others like themselves. At
    the moment, we have three mutual assistance groups - two in Yerevan
    and one in the province of Lori."

    The organization is working with 50 people, most of them men. Women
    find it harder to adapt to their new situation and are more likely
    to fall into deep depression than men. The major problems of these
    people are social.

    Many of them used to work outside Armenia and when they came back they
    were reluctant to look for jobs here. Though the people around them
    are unaware of their condition, the infected people shut themselves
    off from society.

    Madoyan says they have a feeling of disgrace, finding they are worth
    nothing and that no employer would give them a job. Besides there
    is a change of roles in families with the burden of the bread-winner
    shifting to women, this is also a heavy psychological situation for
    Armenian males, considered traditionally the main bread-winners. Though
    there is no record of a man or a woman being sacked because of HIV,
    this is because its carriers keep it secret.

    "We talk about the history of the disease," Madoyan says "and how
    it is spread, what effect it has on the immune system as well as
    the biological and psychological developments. Later, they will pass
    on that knowledge by talking with other people living with HIV." He
    says this type of assistance is effective in reaching a group that
    might otherwise not listen to someone else from a different social
    background. No cases of suicide caused by HIV were reported, but many
    people lead a life that is tantamount to a slow suicide. The reason
    is that HIV is still the plague of the 20th century and people have
    no hope and do not believe they can lead an active life for another
    7-8 years more.

    There are also problems concerning primary health availability
    for people with HIV. Hovhannes Madoyan says many people with HIV
    complained about doctors who refuse to examine them after learning
    they are HIV-positive. He says the reaction of doctors could be
    understood as they are not protected enough against the disease. The
    anti-retro-virus is applied in many countries as a preventative
    medicine in case of contact with infected blood.

    It reduces the risk of being infected ten times. The organization
    plans to ask the health ministry to register this medicine and once
    doctors are immune from HIV, cases of their refusal to treat people
    with HIV/AIDS would be considered a violation of the constitutional
    right of all citizens to medical care.

    If previously infected women were avoiding having children, according
    to Madoyan, their chances of giving birth to healthy babies are
    higher now.

    They can get a course of an anti-retrovirus treatment before
    delivery. But Madoyan also says neither society, nor HIV/AIDS sufferers
    are prepared today to raise and debate the problem of HIV/AIDS. He
    argues that all such programs will prove effective only with the
    participation of those infected.

    "They are not ready to openly speak about their problems," he says.

    Cynthia Backley, who coordinates an HIV/AIDS program for the three
    nations of the South Caucasus, says the main problem is peoples'
    poor knowledge about the disease and their intolerance towards
    infected people.

    Studies showed the intolerance is caused by misperceptions of how it is
    transmitted, the level of its danger and how it can be prevented. She
    says when people have no information about these issues they are prone
    to discriminating against HIV or AIDS victims. Discrimination against
    HIV/AIDS carriers is present in Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia. A
    survey showed that one third of respondents said they would reject
    friendship, contacts or communication with such people. In this sense
    education programs for the three republics are important. Backley
    highlighted a program called 'Equal to Equal' which is implemented
    by Armenian AIDS Prevention Center.

    Samvel Grigorian, head of the National AIDS Prevention Center,
    says the number of people with this disease is on the rise, but he
    attributes this to higher accessibility of examination rather than to
    their real increase. The first case of HIV was registered in Armenia
    in 1988. According to official statistics, between 1988 and 2005,
    the number of people living with HIV/AIDS in Armenia, a country with
    a total population of around 3 million, is 344.

    The HIV/AIDS situation assessment, however, has shown that the
    estimated number of people living with HIV/AIDS is about 2,400-2,800.

    The economic crisis, unemployment, labor migration and the rapid growth
    of HIV rates in the region contribute to the spread of HIV/AIDS in
    Armenia, where an unprecedented 53 new cases of HIV infection have been
    registered this year. Out of the officially registered 344 carriers
    325 are men, 72 are women and 6 are children. The first children with
    HIV were registered in 2001, and virtually all of them were infected
    by their mothers, but this does not represent the full picture as
    many mothers refuse to have their newborn babies tested for HIV.

    The majority of HIV/AIDS carriers are in their 20s. Most infection
    comes about through the intravenous injection of drugs - 53.6 percent -
    and through heterosexual contacts - 38.2 percent. Ninety-one of these
    people have AIDS, 17 are women and 4 children. Sixty-seven people
    with AIDS have died, including 10 women and 2 children. Those who
    were infected by drug injection were all men, some of who had worked
    or studied in Russia and Ukraine.

    It is very expensive to treat HIV sufferers in Armenia. Twenty people
    have been receiving anti-retrovirus treatment this year and they
    will have to take the medicine for the rest of their lives. The
    medicine was brought to Armenia thanks to a $7.2 million grant
    donated to Armenia by the Global Fund to Fight Against Malaria,
    TB and AIDS. Though many scientists are skeptical about Armenicum,
    a drug developed through Armenian research, it is said to strengthen
    the immune system. Armenicum is being applied now in Zambia, Liberia
    and India. Officials from Armenicum Center say it is now being tested
    in 20 countries and Russia is likely to register it soon. At the
    initiative of the Armenian health ministry 50 patients are being
    treated with it free of charge.

    These projects are being carried out as part of a national program for
    the prevention of HIV/AIDS with the support of government agencies,
    non-governmental and international organizations. Every year on
    World AIDS Day, local organizations in partnership with Armenian
    churches organize a number of events aimed to raise awareness on
    HIV/AIDS. Memorial services for the victims of HIV/AIDS are held
    in the churches in Holy Etchmiadzin and in the regions. The church
    leaders address the importance of focusing on women and girls and
    their vulnerability to HIV. They also stress the role of women in
    preserving traditional family values, which is crucial in the battle
    against HIV/AIDS.

    The HIV/AIDS situation in the world and in Armenia, its impact on
    women and girls, the issues of HIV education, prevention, treatment
    and care are discussed during the live TV program dedicated to the
    World AIDS Day.
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