International alert series: The BIG Issues
Fighting HIV and AIDS
What's required to achieve an HIV and AIDS free world
Tuesday 4 April 2006
Presented by
World Vision Australia and AusAID
and supported by
The Bob Hawke Prime Ministerial Centre, UniSA
Sister
Patricia Pak Poy, Sisters of Mercy, Adelaide
Over the last fifteen years I have been active in the Campaign to
Ban Landmines – we saw immediately that we needed a total global ban on
these explosive weapons which kill and maim, that action was needed on a
government and international level, that production had to cease, that land
had to be cleared of these victim-activated weapons and that
victims/survivors had to be rehabilitated and re-integrated into their
communities. Something had to be done! It still has to be done. We realise
we still have to act now for a mine free world and that every step counts.
Hope Adelaide has learned the same lesson for joining the fight against the
HIV/AIDS pandemic, an explosive pandemic that calls us to see the problem
and to act now; and to realise that every step, no matter how small, can
count for good in helping prevent the spread of the disease and in assisting
those living with HIV/AIDS Our neighbours help collect 5 cent cans, and the
local parish has joined the fund-raising; but of course the pandemic
warrants billions to be spent globally to address the ignorance and fear in
the world community, to provide for medical research on the production of
vaccinations, medications and treatments, and to support people living with
AIDS and their communities.
Hope Adelaide Inc is a small group of volunteers based here in Adelaide.
There are 10 of us – a mixed bag of men and women, young and old,
ethnically, politically and religiously diverse – but standing united on the
ground of all we hold in common: the good or our people.
Four years ago, a couple of young members asked if we could help address the
AIDS problem facing the Burmese community in Mizoram in India – people from
remote areas in Burma now in a foreign state, though with some ancient
cultural ties with the local Miso people. As they said: Many “do not know
there is such a thing as AIDS, don’t know how you get it, and don’t know
what to do about it.” We had no money, no great expertise and not much
capacity beyond the 10 of us to address this enormous problem facing the
world. So we ‘did what we could’: we identified a small local group that was
willing to undertake a project with us, we found out some of the facts of
the global and local situation; we researched what was already happening in
Mizoram and who was missing out on the action; we asked what was needed, and
together we set about designing a simple project for which we could seek
some financial support.
We found that the target groups in Mizoram, as in many places, were the
intravenous drug users, the sex workers and the ‘truckies’. However, the
main group of Burmese in Mizoram were Chin people many of whom were migrants
across a rather porous border, and some of whom were refugees and others of
whom were itinerant workers trying to earn a living for themselves and their
families. The community in the larger towns could be easily found, but many
were in isolated villages in remote areas – and Mizoram is a mountainous
state, with few roads, few vehicles and fewer amenities.
With the local community group which now has developed into the Integrated
Voluntary Public Health Education Network, we sought funding for a pilot
project on basic education on HIV/AIDS. Caritas Australia agreed to fund the
pilot, and on the results of the evaluation agreed to fund this and a
similar project in another area for three years.
Teams of field workers are given very basic training in the nature of the
disease – of what HIV/AIDs is, how it is spread, how it can be prevented,
what treatment and services are needed, advised, and available; workers are
given some basic counselling skills, and encouraged to promote behaviours
that help prevent the spread of the disease. Training is given by experts
from the hospitals, welfare agencies and other organizations servicing the
Mizo and Indian population. Quarterly meetings keep up the skills
development and the morale of the workers.
Large group seminars were found to be unsuitable for the particular target
groups and communities. With their coordinators the workers have devised and
refined a house-to-house method and methodology, visiting villages, isolated
communities and work camps in teams of men and women, sometimes working with
families, groups of families and young people. The use of informal
conversation and discussion, based on the brochure which is left with each
person, is more effective and culturally appropriate than seminars or public
meetings, though in a village, a meeting of all the people is held to
conclude the group’s visit. The people ask such basic questions as
- What are the main symptoms of AIDS?
- Do condoms prevent HIV infection? What percentage prevention?
- How long does the HIV virus survive in a dead body?
- How long do patients survive after infection by AIDS virus?
- What percent of infected mothers infect their child?
- Can one be infected through sharing syringes? Shaving razors?
The information is basic; public services are limited – district
hospitals need to be developed as AIDS clinics to facilitate testing and
follow-up treatment where necessary. In Mizoram, there is a network of
organizations offering AIDS education and treatment, but the Burmese and
Chin-speaking people need to have the information in their own language –
and in their isolated locations. Workers have to walk in 5 or 15 kms to the
village or climb narrow mountain paths to reach the isolated work camp; they
need to stop over-night or over-fortnight with the communities and this
presents its own demands and hardships – but the affirmation received
indicates the appreciation of the people served. Behaviour changes – greater
care with syringes, safe sexual practice – are to be promoted – but the
information is hard to obtain from isolated and transient populations. The
lessening of fear of people living with AIDS instead of immediate ostracism,
resumption of traditional funeral practices among villagers, instead of the
immediate burning of the corpses and the belonging of the deceased, all
indicate a learning that is real but often hard to measure.
Hope Adelaide has learned much from this project and from the other projects
it has undertaken. We can affirm that everyone can contribute to this fight
against AIDS – knowledge of the situation, (and this includes economic,
political and cultural situations), identification of points of creative
intervention that are possible to a given individual or group, and a
willingness to use the power of one with others to achieve a result that
will build the common good.
Patricia Pak Poy rsm
Hope Adelaide Inc
Future events
All events will be held at the Adelaide Town Hall from 5.30pm - 7.00pm. Schools Alert will be held from 4.00pm - 5.00pm.
Free and Fairer Trade
Can trade be both free and equitable in a global economy?
Tuesday 6 June 2006
Water Lessons
Defending ecosystems and resurrecting community rights
Tuesday 1 August 2006
War and Peace
Peacekeeping and peacemaking to address conflict in our region
Tuesday 3 October 2006
Previous events
- Beyond Tsunami Tuesday 19 July 2005
- Make Poverty History Tuesday 6 September 2005
- Women's Rights in Development Tuesday 7 February 2006
- Fighting HIV and AIDS Tuesday 4 April 2006
