IntroductionWomen living with HIV experience a disproportionate burden of mental health issues. To date, global guidelines contain insufficient guidance on mental health support, particularly regarding perinatal care. The aim of this article is to describe the extent and impact of mental health issues as experienced by women living with HIV on their sexual and reproductive health and human rights (SRH&HR).MethodsA global, mixed-methods, user-led and designed survey on SRH&HR of women living with HIV was conducted using snowball sampling, containing an optional section exploring mental health issues. Statistical quantitative data analysis included descriptive statistics, correlation and multiple linear regression analysis for the mental health responses. Thematic analysis of open free-text responses was performed for qualitative data.ResultsA total of 832 respondents from 94 countries participated in the online survey with 489 responses to the optional mental health section. Of the respondents, 82% reported depression symptoms and 78% rejection. One-fifth reported mental health issues before HIV diagnosis. Respondents reported experiencing a 3.5-fold higher number of mental health issues after diagnosis (8.71 vs 2.48, t[488]=23.00, p<0.001). Nearly half (n=224; 45.8%) had multiple socially disadvantaged identities (SDIs). The number of SDIs was positively correlated with experiencing mental health issues (p<0.05). Women described how mental health issues affected their ability to enjoy their right to sexual and reproductive health and to access services. These included depression, rejection and social exclusion, sleep problems, intersectional stigma, challenges with sexual and intimate relationships, substance use and sexual risk, reproductive health barriers and human rights (HR) violations. Respondents recommended that policymakers and clinicians provide psychological support and counselling, funding for peer support and interventions to challenge gender-based violence and to promote HR.ConclusionsInterventions addressing intersecting stigmas and any especial impacts of diagnosis during pregnancy are required to ensure women's SRH&HR. Global policy guidelines regarding women living with HIV must incorporate mental health considerations.
IntroductionWomen living with HIV are vulnerable to gender-based violence (GBV) before and after diagnosis, in multiple settings. This study's aim was to explore how GBV is experienced by women living with HIV, how this affects women's sexual and reproductive health (SRH) and human rights (HR), and the implications for policymakers.MethodsA community-based, participatory, user-led, mixed-methods study was conducted, with women living with HIV from key affected populations. Simple descriptive frequencies were used for quantitative data. Thematic coding of open qualitative responses was performed and validated with key respondents.ResultsIn total, 945 women living with HIV from 94 countries participated in the study. Eighty-nine percent of 480 respondents to an optional section on GBV reported having experienced or feared violence, either before, since and/or because of their HIV diagnosis. GBV reporting was higher after HIV diagnosis (intimate partner, family/neighbours, community and health settings). Women described a complex and iterative relationship between GBV and HIV occurring throughout their lives, including breaches of confidentiality and lack of SRH choice in healthcare settings, forced/coerced treatments, HR abuses, moralistic and judgemental attitudes (including towards women from key populations), and fear of losing child custody. Respondents recommended healthcare practitioners and policymakers address stigma and discrimination, training, awareness-raising, and HR abuses in healthcare settings.ConclusionsRespondents reported increased GBV with partners and in families, communities and healthcare settings after their HIV diagnosis and across the life-cycle. Measures of GBV must be sought and monitored, particularly within healthcare settings that should be safe. Respondents offered policymakers a comprehensive range of recommendations to achieve their SRH and HR goals. Global guidance documents and policies are more likely to succeed for the end-users if lived experiences are used.
U niversities have long been important in the development of life-saving medicines and technologies, and they once considered patenting to be antithetical to academic science and public health. Now a fierce debate rages about whether and when patents promote innovation, but in practice, the patenting worm has turned: Seeking revenues and ways to commercialize their inventions, U.S. universities are taking out patents in unprecedented numbers. In 2001, they were granted more than 3000 of them. But patents bring more than revenues. They also bring controversy, when they ensure power over commodities that are the very currency of life itself. Today, universities hold important patents on many life-saving drugs, including the antiretroviral drugs stavudine (Yale University), abacavir (University of Minnesota), lamivudine (Emory University), and enfuvirtide (Duke University). As the AIDS pandemic has demonstrated, patents and exclusive licenses typically drive prices up and thereby impede access to lifesaving medications. Low prices alone cannot solve the global crisis in access to medicines, but they are necessary, particularly for those in lowand middle-income (LMI) countries, where governments have limited resources and people often pay for part or all of their health care. We have seen firsthand the effects of university patenting and licensing decisions. In February 2001, Doctors Without Borders sought Yale's permission to use a generic version of stavudine in South Africa. This prompted global attention and intense discussions between the university and Bristol-Myers Squibb (to whom it had exclusively licensed the drug). The result was the first patent concession on an AIDS drug and a 30-fold reduction in the price of the patented drug in South Africa. This action was taken without negative consequences to the university, financial or otherwise. Recently, a local company began selling generic stavudine in South Africa at up to 40% less than the reduced patented price. A group of experts recently convened at Yale concluded that universities can improve and save lives by working collectively to adopt access-friendly intellectual property (IP) policies (see Access to Essential Medicines and University Research: Building Best Practices at http://cira.med.yale.edu). This will require developing specific licensing and patenting strategies that are applicable to LMI countries. Such strategies must be tailored to the technology and partner, but broadly speaking, they fall into two categories. First, universities could not patent their discoveries in LMI countries. This will promote generic competition as long as all the IP necessary to produce a generic version of a product stays in the public domain and no patent barriers exist in important source countries for generics (such as Brazil, India, and Thailand). Today, universities rarely patent in most developing countries because of the expense, but some will do so if a licensee requests it or if there is a market or potential generic competitor in the country. If univer...
The global HIV and AIDS epidemics disproportionately affect women, particularly young women in southern and eastern Africa. UNAIDS, amongst other actors, has singled out National Strategic Plans for HIV and AIDS (NSPs) as a critical platform for ensuring that women and girls are meaningfully included in national HIV and AIDS responses. Despite this, there is little evidence as to how or whether NSPs integrate responses to women and girls. Using a collaboratively developed framework, we assessed how 20 countries in southern and eastern Africa integrated women and girls in their NSPs. We identified that in general there is poor inclusion, apart from access to post-exposure prophylaxis in the case of sexual violence and access to vertical transmission services. Drawing on Moser's distinction between women's practical and strategic interests, we suggest that overall women and girls are poorly included in NSPs, and where there are policies and programmes, there is an overwhelming focus on women's practical interests, without any consideration of women's strategic interests. We argue that this limits the potential of NSPs to be platforms for national responses that meaningfully seek to transform gender relations.
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