Statement
High Level Global Consultation on Linking HIV/AIDS with Sexual and Reproductive Health
07 June 2004
Statement
07 June 2004
Remarks by Thoraya Ahmed Obaid, Executive Director UNFPA
Today, I want to be very practical. I want to answer the question: Why should we link HIV/AIDS with sexual and reproductive health.
Deputy Secretary-General Louise Frechette has mentioned several reasons why the two should be linked:
So, we musk ask ourselves: Why have HIV/AIDS and sexual and reproductive health gone their own separate ways? As far as I can tell, there are several reasons:
But I am pleased to report that, recently, more discussions are taking place around this important issue. I am hopeful that we will see more links in areas where such integration makes sense, most specifically, in interventions that affect women, especially poor women. We’ve moved beyond talking and are now even holding hands in some cases. And it’s about time.
We at UNFPA know that we must put join others in order to make this necessary link and, thus, win a real war against a threat to humanity, the killer HIV/AIDS. We are optimistic that our friends in the HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment community are beginning to come to the same realization. If we do not combine our efforts, we will certainly lose the war against HIV/AIDS. Without linking our efforts, we cannot scale-up our responses, and HIV will spread much faster than our efforts to save people’s lives.
We now have a range of proven, effective ways to prolong life and control the spread of HIV/AIDS. Our real challenge is to work together to scale-up the interventions we have. By doing so, we can:
There are many efforts underway to further the discussions and expand the understanding on the linkages between sexual and reproductive health and HIV/AIDS, including the recent meeting in Glion and the UNFPA technical round table in New York.
It is no coincidence that the General Assembly special session Declaration of Commitment on HIV/AIDS, and the Millennium Development Goals build on the agreement reached at the fifth-year review of 1994 the International Conference on Population and Development. It was the Cairo programme on Population and Development that began the articulation of a comprehensive approach to reproductive health, including HIV/AIDS.
We have also found that voluntary counselling and testing can be carried out quite effectively in reproductive health settings. This is important because there is now an urgent need to expand access to voluntary counselling and testing as an entry point to both prevention and treatment.
Results from pilot projects in the Côte d’Ivoire and India—and experience in Kenya, Rwanda and Ethiopia—show that integrating voluntary counselling and testing into sexual and reproductive health services produces exponential benefits.
The cost of providing voluntary counselling and testing within existing reproductive health settings is lower than setting up freestanding sites.
Together with the International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF), we have found that the necessary linkages, and even integration, in some areas of work:
While I have been talking about integrating voluntary counselling and testing into reproductive health clinics, we can also integrate reproductive health – including family planning, and sexual health into the counselling services.
Preventing Mother-To-Child Transmission Plus
Working together, we can increase access to services to prevent mother-to-child transmission. There is no reason why the great majority of HIV-positive women in the poorest countries should not have access to effective prevention of mother-to-child transmission plus.
This intervention can and should be incorporated into routine antenatal care along with voluntary testing and counselling.
Programmes to prevent the transmission of HIV to pregnant women, mothers and their children must become a routine component of maternal care, for the sake of the women and their children.
A survey of antenatal clinics offering prevention of mother-to-child transmission plus in 11 African countries found that, on average, 80 per cent of women accepted voluntary counselling and testing. This shows that prevention of mother-to-child transmission plus is also a promising entry point for the provision of anti-retrovirals.
Diagnosis And Treatment Of STIs
Another area in which greater cooperation is possible is in the diagnosis and treatment of sexually transmitted infections (STIs).
Fortunately, the methods used to prevent HIV can also be used to prevent other STIs. These include ensuring the right of adolescents to abstain from sex, delaying the onset of sexual activity, reducing one’s risk of exposure by remaining mutually faithful to one partner, and correctly and consistently using male and female condoms.
The dual protection function of condoms, to simultaneously prevent unwanted pregnancy and infection from HIV and other STIs must be promoted.
STI diagnosis and treatment should be available wherever possible and, certainly, wherever anti-retroviral services are offered. STI programmes are a critical aspect of integrating prevention and treatment.
Expanding Access to Treatment
Another area where we should cooperate is in increasing access to treatment. People living with AIDS have been demanding greater access to treatment for years. Now that the World Health Organization (WHO) has committed itself to providing 3 million people with anti-retroviral treatment by the end of next year, we are faced with the challenge of doing so.
To ensure the right of women – who are often marginalized and vulnerable – to receive treatment, we must establish a system that links the reproductive health services that women seek and anti-retroviral services. If they are not integrated, they should at least be on one location, with a referral system established. If such an arrangement is not envisioned from the very beginning, we will be forced to encounter women – who are the real face of HIV/AIDS – having less access to services to prolong their lives. As it is, women are vulnerable and, thus, victims initially not of HIV per se, but of the irresponsible behaviour and practices of their male partners. Such practices, along with women’s inability to negotiate their relationships, will make women, in turn, victims of HIV—thus, double victimization. Denying them treatment would triple the degree of their victimization. If that happens, what human rights shall we be talking about, we should ask ourselves.
Reproductive health centres, most of which are community-based, provide entry points to the acquisition of life-saving drugs to many people. Conversely, where HIV/AIDS services stand alone as vertical programmes, they, too, should address their clients’ reproductive health needs.
Moving Forward
I want to stress that we may talk about integrating services endlessly, but unless we tackle the underlying forces driving the AIDS epidemic, we will make little progress. Reproductive health and HIV/AIDS are both multisectoral challenges that cut across socio-economic, cultural and gender issues. Reducing the spread of HIV/AIDS and improving reproductive health, therefore, require simultaneous efforts on many fronts.
We know too well that power dynamics between the sexes shape the context within which their relationships are determined. In most cases, men have the upper hand. Therefore, male involvement and responsibility are critical needs.
Also critical are greater efforts for the empowerment of women and girls, including education, life skills, income-earning opportunities and legal rights. We must move from an approach that focuses on risk to another that focuses on vulnerability, and the empowerment of the poor. We must address the vulnerability of women and girls and improve their status in society. We must work with communities in a culturally sensitive way to tackle discriminatory attitudes, harmful traditional practices and violence against women and girls. Both reproductive health and anti-HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment work will gain immeasurably from such coordinated efforts.
I would like to stress that we should link not only at the service-provision level, but also at the policy level. We need to work together to ensure that effective multisectoral policies are established to make the best use of scarce resources, thus allowing the leveraging of both external and domestic resources. This applies to building effective responses across sectors; training health care workers and counsellors; producing protocols, procedures and guidelines; and monitoring and reporting. All policies to eradicate poverty should address as a core concern the rights of women and men to receive reproductive health and HIV/AIDS services. Such policies must also recognize this right as one of those that poverty eradication will address.
This also means working to achieve the THREE ONES announced by Peter last year and reiterated in subsequent statements.
It is important to learn from past lessons. We have learned the hard way from family planning, prior to the Cairo consensus, that vertical programmes, which are not integrated, do not work. They drain the fragile resources of countries and end up being unsustainable in the longer term. We should move forward with this important lesson in mind. And that is that the “Call to Commitment” is all about.
I just would like to reiterate that, if we link HIV/AIDS prevention/treatment and sexual and reproductive health, we can be more effective, can use resources more wisely and can be better able to meet the needs of individuals. I believe that people would welcome going to just one location to receive a comprehensive package of services.
Finally, we need to think of this whole matter as one intervention that would create a supportive environment in which the poor, deprived, marginalized and vulnerable could exercise their human rights to life, a life of dignity, and to the many other rights enjoyed by the rich and the powerful. The bottom line is this: the most vulnerable people in the world have a right to development.