Secretary
general Didier Cherpitel and Zimbabwean Chief Chirau (from Zvimba)
discuss home-based care for people living with HIV/AIDS. Traditional
chiefs are involved in Red Cross care programmes to ensure good communication
with the community.
(p6252)
The
South African Red Cross is running a number of programmes to prevent
the transmission of the virus from HIV-positive pregnant and new mothers
to their babies.
(p6253)

In Soweto,
South Africa, Didier Cherpitel met home care workers (on photo) and
patients. The Red Cross has trained some 200 home care workers here
alone.
(p6255)
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Long-term commitment to fight AIDS
in southern Africa
26
March 2001
by M.F Borel in Cape Town
"When you see young men
and women wasting away to their death, leaving behind traumatized
children and desperate grandparents, you know something must be done
now. A whole generation is about to disappear. This is why we must
join our efforts to those of other partners and greatly expand our
programmes to help people living with HIV/Aids, as quickly as possible."
It is with those words that the Secretary general of the International
Federation, Didier Cherpitel, ended a five-day trip to Zimbabwe and
South Africa that took him from the boardrooms of government officials
to the bedside of terminally ill AIDS patients. Mr. Cherpitel visited
several Red Cross home care projects in both countries.
Mr. Cherpitel travelled to southern Africa to gain a better understanding
of Red Cross home care programmes for AIDS sufferers and their families,
to see the work of volunteers in the field in this area, and to discuss
possible partnership strategies with government officials, private
industry and other organizations involved in the fight to stop the
spread of the disease.
As a response to the pandemic (more than 24 million people are HIV-positive
in Africa alone), the International Federation has designed a regional
plan to be implemented in the ten Red Cross Societies of southern
Africa. Within two weeks, the Federation and the National Societies
will identify districts where they can set up programmes or enlarge
existing ones.
The action comes as a follow-up to the Ouagadougou conference of September
2000, where 53 African National Societies committed themselves to
addressing more vigorously and effectively the issues of community
health and food security, under what is called the African Red Cross/Red
Crescent Health Initiative (ARCHI). These five-year action plans will
focus on home-based care for people living with HIV/AIDS, on prevention
and education, on counselling and on the training and recruitment
of volunteers.
"We have some two million volunteers in Africa, but needs are so great
that hundreds of thousands more will be needed to effectively combat
the spread of HIV at the community level. It is at the community level
that we can make a real difference in changing peopl's behaviour",
stressed Mr. Cherpitel.
The action plans will also include community care for orphans - there
are 600,000 orphans in Zimbabwe today and it is estimated there will
be one million orphans under 15 in South Africa by the end of 2002.
Education is also a priority for governments. Teaching children how
to avoid getting infected must begin at an early age in schools, since
according to regional statistics in southern Africa, children become
sexually active on the average at 11 ears old, some as young as 8
or 9.
In many of the discussions
attended by the Secretary general, it was apparent that governments
and other organizations working to combat HIV/AIDS are particularly
concerned about opportunistic diseases, and tuberculosis in particular.
In South Africa, the number of cases of tuberculosis increased by
42% over last year, to 270,000 cases for the Western Cape province
alone, according to the Minister of Health. "We must all work to make
sure that appropriate medicines are available for people suffering
from preventable diseases, such as tuberculosis", noted Mr. Cherpitel.
The new Red Cross action plans defining the type of activities will
be drawn up by April 20 for six countries (Zimbabwe, Swaziland, Lesotho,
Angola, Zambia and Malawi). Plans for the other four (Mozambique,
South Africa, Botswana and Namibia) will be done by May 30.
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