HIV Positive Children in Zambia Increasing, Services Lacking

Nearly one percent of Zambia’s population is made up of HIV positive children. But most HIV/AIDS programs here focus on adults. For HIV positive children in Zambia, many who are AIDS orphans, a host of challenges remain. Access to education is limited and discrimination is common.

by Dando Mweetwa , Friday - August 20, 2010

 

LUSAKA, ZAMBIA – On the days when her grandmother, Rose “Agogo” Banda, 70, is not able to sell sand, Elinate Banda, 13, takes her antiretroviral medication on an empty stomach.

 

Banda says she loves school, but she has never been able to attend regularly. Sometimes she cannot go when her uniform is too dirty because they have no soap. Other times, she is in the hospital.

 

Banda is HIV positive. Her mother, who has long been infected, transferred the disease to Banda and her twin sister in the womb. Her twin died as an infant.

 

Banda has three healthy older siblings, but Banda has been sickly all of her life. She takes antiretroviral medicine, a cocktail of drugs to combat her HIV infection, that she gets from the Chasanga government clinic. The medicine is free.

 

When Banda’s father died of complications from HIV when she was a toddler, her grandmother, Agogo, took responsibility for the girl.

 

Agogo, which means grandma in the local language Nyanja, lives in a three-room apartment in the Chasanga compound just north of Lusaka, the capital city. Habitat for Humanity, an international organization that builds affordable housing for people in need, built Agogo the apartment three years ago. Recently, she managed to secure a place for Banda at Shoulin Community School. Admission to a school is a rarity for HIV positive children in Zambia.

 

Although more than 95,000 children in Zambia are HIV positive—nearly one percent of the population—few programs exist that focus on care for children living with AIDS. Conversely, millions of dollars in government and international investments have been designated to support prevention and treatment programs for adults living with AIDS in Zambia, where one in five adults is HIV positive. For HIV positive children in Zambia, many who are AIDS orphans, a host of challenges remain. Access to education is limited and discrimination is common.

 

“Many children living with HIV are single or double orphans here. Most of the children living with HIV lack support from the community, NGOs and [the] government,” says Joseph Shimba of Shoulin Community School, where Banda was recently admitted.

 

Before Banda attended the Shoulin Community School, she went to Chasanga Basic School. But her classmates refused to sit next to her. Banda says she was taunted and laughed at for being sick.

 

“Instead of going to school, she would [disappear] and go somewhere. This went on for some time until I checked her books. I told the teacher about the stigma she encountered. The teacher told me he was going to punish those laughing at my daughter,” says Fidal Mbewe, 42, Banda’s mother.

 

When nothing was done, Agogo arranged for Banda to attend the community school closer to home. Despite the better location and the fact that Banda says she likes the school, the educational standards are significantly lower. The Shoulin School has limited facilities and does not employ any certified teachers.

 



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Public Health Message in Lusaka, Zambia

by Press Institute

"I want to become a teacher or a pilot."



Topics:
Education, Health, Poverty, Social
Tags:
children, Education, HIV, poverty, Zambia



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