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About HIV/AIDS
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ASIA PACIFIC AT A GLANCE VIETNAM THAILAND MALAYSIA IRAN SRI LANKA AFGHANISTAN DPR KOREA BANGLADESH BHUTAN CHINA FIJI INDIA Indonesia MALDIVES MONGOLIA NEPAL PAKISTAN REPUBLIC OF KOREA PHILIPPINES ASIA PACIFIC AT A GLANCE Lao People’s Democratic Republic Myanmar Cambodia Vietnam
THE EPIDEMIC
THEMES
 
Home » Themes
 
  EMPOWERMENT OF PEOPLE LIVING WITH HIV/AIDS
 
Introduction
The emergence of the Greater Involvement of PLWHA (GIPA) Principles
Asia Pacific Region: Involvement of PLWHA
UNDP's Response
Empowerment of PLWHA: A Third Generation Response to HIV?
Links
 
 
 
Today, it is internationally recognised that a crucial goal and hallmark of HIV/AIDS advocacy is the meaningful involvement of People Living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) in all aspects of programmatic and policy related responses. During the early phase of the HIV epidemic, PLWHA helped each other and drew support from friends, family and sympathetic community members. However, the medical, public health and research establishments took time to get acculturated to bringing the PLWHA into decision-making and planning.
 
Experiences from around the world make it clear that no community or country can tackle the negative fall-out of HIV/AIDS without building on the strengths and the first hand knowledge of those living with the infection. In countries where PLWHA have taken the initiative to mount constructive responses, such as Brazil, Thailand and Uganda, there has been a slow-down in new infections and a more sensitive approach to care has emerged.
 
The strategic change from top-down to more participatory approaches not only meant the inclusion of PLWHA but also youth, communities and especially vulnerable populations in the design and implementation of responses to HIV/AIDS. Although this approach has still to become the norm in all efforts to contain the HIV epidemic and provide care and support to those infected and affected by HIV/AIDS, there has been a clear movement towards adopting it. Policies, projects and initiatives of this kind could be categorised as the 'second generation response' to HIV/AIDS.
 
 
The emergence of the Greater Involvement of PLWHA (GIPA) Principles
 
The idea that the personal experiences of PLWHA could and should shape the response to the epidemic found a public voice in 1983 when a small band of PLWHA gathered at a national medical conference on AIDS in Denver, Colorado, protesting their exclusion from the planning process of workshops related to AIDS. There, positive activists announced a set of principles destined to revolutionise the way the world responds to an epidemic. The “Denver Principles” set forth standards for human rights and self-empowerment in a health crisis.
 
The Denver Principles include:
  • A refusal to be ‘victims’;
  • A request for support from all people;
  • A plea against stigma & discrimination;
  • A call to all positive people to choose:
  • 1 to be involved at all levels of decision making;
    2 to be included in all AIDS forums;
    3 to be responsible for their own sexual health & to inform all their partners of their HIV status.
  • A demand for:
  • 1 a full & satisfying sexual & emotional life;
    2 provision of quality medical treatment & social service;
    3 full explanations of medical procedures and risks & the right to choose or refuse treatment;
    4 privacy & confidentiality of medical records & disclosure;
    5 the right to die & live in dignity.
 
The acronym GIPA was publicly vocalised for the first time during the preparatory meetings of the Paris AIDS Summit in 1994. The term was used in the Declaration that was signed by representatives of 42 countries which undertook to "fully involve...People living with HIV/AIDS in the formulation and implementation of public policies…" and to "…support the greater involvement of people living with HIV/AIDS (GIPA)." The principles of GIPA were later reinforced by the UNGASS Declaration in 2001 signed by almost all members of the United Nations. They have been adopted by UNAIDS and GIPA is presently an integral, indispensable part of all major international declarations pertaining to the epidemic.
 
GIPA PRINCIPLES
 
  • To support the greater involvement of people living with HIV and AIDS (PLWHA) through initiatives to strengthen the capacity of and coordination of networks of PLWHA and CBOs stimulating the creation of a supportive political, legal and social environment;
  • To involve PLWHA fully in decision making, formulation and implementation of public policies;
  • To protect and promote the rights of individuals, in particular those living with or most vulnerable to HIV/AIDS, through legal and social environments;
  • To make available necessary resources to better combat the pandemic including adequate support for PLWHA, NGOs and CBOs working with vulnerable and marginalized populations;
  • To strengthen national and international mechanisms connected to human rights and ethics related to HIV/AIDS.

    Declaration of the Paris AIDS Summit,1 December 1994.
 
 
Asia Pacific Region: Involvement of PLWHA
 
For most countries in the Asia Pacific region where the HIV epidemic has not yet matured, the first generation, top down interventionist responses still dominate efforts to stem the spread of HIV or care for those affected.
 
In the Asia Pacific region where the majority of PLWHA live in constant fear, battling stigma and discrimination in their daily lives, the criticality of Greater Involvement of People Living with HIV/AIDS (GIPA) as a strategy to alleviate their condition cannot be overstated. Public visibility of the active involvement of PLWHA at all levels can challenge existing HIV related myths and derogatory stereo-typing and help reduce stigma and discrimination. GIPA can promote a positive shift in the way society perceives PLWHA and can sow the seeds for an enabling environment wherein PLWHA, their families and communities may live with self respect and dignity.
 
Outcomes of GIPA
 
Despite promotion of the GIPA Principle, there is still relatively little commitment to involving and integrating positive people in programs providing AIDS care, support, prevention and education. Few government and non-government organisations pro-actively include positive people in their responses to HIV/AIDS at national or local levels. Many of the positive activists who are involved in the sector come to feel exploited rather than inspired by their role. Many suffer burnt out and, without access to appropriate medication, care or support, become critically ill and withdraw from active involvement. There is often a lack of financial support for positive people’s groups, and groups that receive funding are frequently driven by their donors instead of by their needs. GIPA has become yet another acronym and the true meaning and realisation of GIPA has been lost.
 
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UNDP's response
 
UNDP had been working with HIV since the late eighties and was quick to adopt the principle of participation, and initiate second generation responses to the HIV epidemic. One of UNDP's earliest projects addressed GIPA successfully and was implemented in South Africa in the late nineties where the epidemic was already characterised by a very large number of PLWHA. Two key events provided the rationale for involvement. In 1997, a review of the country's HIV/AIDS Plan (1994-1997) found that levels of HIV/AIDS related stigma and discrimination were unacceptably high. The GIPA principle was proposed as being crucial to effective HIV/AIDS prevention and management, and it was recommended that steps be taken to improve the acceptance and support of PLWHA. In the following year came a call by the then Deputy President, Thabo Mbeki to all sectors of South African society to form a partnership against AIDS. At the time, very few PLWHA knew or were public about their HIV status. UNDP worked in partnership with the Government, civil society and the private sector to initiate the GIPA Workplace Model in South Africa. It also provided an opportunity for the corporate sector to play a noteworthy role in the partnership on HIV/AIDS. The need for businesses to respond was also justified by research findings that detailed the severe extent to which business and the broader economy would be impacted by HIV/AIDS.
 
Though, there is increasing recognition of the importance of PLWHA involvement in the campaign against the HIV epidemic, responses in the Asia Pacific region have not yet accorded adequate importance to the need for involvement and empowerment of PLWHA in prevention efforts.
 
The vast majority of countries in the Asia Pacific region are in the early stages of the epidemic the lessons learned from Africa have not been immediately replicable. Therefore, a pilot project focusing on the five South Asian countries - Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka - was initiated in 2001, named the Greater Involvement of People Living with HIV/AIDS (GIPA) Project. The project aimed at meaningful participation of PLWHA in response to HIV/AIDS in South Asia and was implemented jointly by Sahara - a New Delhi based NGO and UNDP, through the establishment of a close partnership with 17 PLWHA groups in the sub-region. This was the first regional project aimed at raising the profile of GIPA in South Asia. It also hoped to build a participatory process where the PLWHA groups identified activities in the areas of organisational development, awareness building and sensitisation, care and support activities and employment - issues which they felt were crucial for enhancing their capacity to gain influence. The project provided a unique opportunity for PLWHA to network and implements small-scale activities together and signalled the beginning of extensive networking among PLWHA across the Asia Pacific region. By the close of this pilot project in the spring of 2002, the process of learning about GIPA and the difficulties of implementing these principles had already begun.
 
 
Re-examining the principles of Greater Involvement of PLWHA
 
Three years of work by UNDP and its partners has brought about greater awareness of the GIPA Principles in the region. Yet, the conditions in which PLWHA exist have shown little change. Many PLWHA have expressed the frustration that although GIPA was an integral part of international declarations relating to HIV/AIDS and national policies, the intent of the principles, namely, to improve responses to HIV/AIDS and better the situation of PLWHA, has not been realised. PLWHA are still not fully included in prevention and care responses and all too often, their inclusion is a token one.
 
With the support of UNDP and its partners, PLWHA from the region have been able to exchange their perceptions about GIPA and share their experiences. Many are outspoken about the problems they face in the field and are unanimous in their conclusion that the implementation of GIPA has failed to live up to their expectations.
 
The implementation of the GIPA principles would bring about their meaningful empowerment at all levels, enabling them to address their basic needs. The GIPA Project identified some of these needs as being:
 
  • Access to information on HIV-related issues; testing facilities where confidentiality is respected; counselling services, quality treatment and community care;
  • Skills to live positive lives and opportunities to ensure sustainable livelihoods for them and their families; and
  • Capacity to carry out advocacy and make an impact on the epidemic reducing stigma and discrimination in an atmosphere where people can work together for a better future, regardless of their sero-status.
The lack of initiative on the part of NGOs and governments to implement GIPA is of concern to PLWHA. Many PLWHA have expressed anxiety that NGOs neither understand the need for independent and strong PLWHA groups, nor believe that PLWHA have the potential to become an equal partner, given their limited capacity. Governments, while adopting sensitive policies, face difficulties in implementation in many countries of the region. At the same time PLWHA groups have recognised that they need significant strengthening of their organisations and members in order to breathe life into the GIPA principles. The culmination of the piloted GIPA-Project yielded a vision statement formulated by all the PLWHA from South Asia who participated in the pilot phase.
 
Empowerment of PLWHA: A Third Generation Response to HIV?
 
The learning from the pilot phase of the GIPA-Project is that a new GIPA initiative needs to be developed - one that shifts the focus from the limited understanding of GIPA as "genuine involvement" to an expansive vision aimed at the overall empowerment of all PLWHA, their groups and networks.
 
The pilot phase had made it apparent that PLWHA did not view GIPA as an end in itself, but as a tool to achieve the objectives they had set for themselves and their networks. This distinction was crucial in formulating the next phase of the project. Named the Asia Pacific Initiative for Empowerment of PLWHA, the second phase of the GIPA project was conceived as a three-year effort and initiated in the summer of 2002. Despite the global acceptance of the GIPA principles expressed in the Paris AIDS Summit Declaration as well as the international guidelines on HIV/AIDS and human rights, it had become painfully clear to PLWHA that even when implemented, GIPA by itself would not stimulate a change in their living conditions. In some instances, PLWHA felt that they were being 'used' by civil society and that their representation in official committees did not necessarily translate into a truly significant manifestation of their rights or influence.
 
Empowerment of PLWHA: The Future
 
Many groups are now establishing their own independent Positive Speakers’ Bureau. They are going out and pro-actively educating others about HIV and making a change. Some groups have voiced their desire to set up their own voluntary counselling and testing centres although wherever it has been suggested in Asia, it has faced resistance.
 
We need to encourage more women to be involved. Widows and single women face the impact of AIDS-related stigma and discrimination. Many have dependant children and little income, yet they are often the most passionate and committed educators, and those who go public do so sooner after their diagnosis than men do (Paxton, 2002b). So harness the skills of women. They may be the most important element of GIPA.
 
We need to see more and more positive people with the skills, ability, confidence, willingness and the mandate to take part in decision-making bodies, voice their needs of access to information, education, treatment, care and support. We need people who can articulate the rights of all people to lead productive lives in dignity, advocate for the right to optimal health, including sustained access to antiretroviral drugs, and advocate for the right to earn a living and to run income generation projects and have access to micro-credit schemes.
 
When people with HIV have the same rights as all citizens, when they can live in dignity, without fear of discrimination, when they are able to sustain their families and organisations and are provided with all the skills necessary to take on the role of equal partnership in the response to HIV/AIDS, then we can expect them to take on the responsibilities that GIPA implies.
 
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Links
 
Asia Pacific PLWHA Resource Centre http://www.PLWHA.org
 
 
     
Other Themes
   
Sexually Infected Transmissions Trafficking Voluntary Counselling & Testing
 
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