Stop Discrimination against Persons Living with HIV – Ambode’s Wife

Fri, Dec 2, 2016
By publisher
2 MIN READ

BREAKING NEWS, Health

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BOLANLE Ambode, wife of Governor Akinwunmi Ambode of Lagos State, wants the public to desist from discriminating against persons living with HIV.

Ambode made the call in Ikeja, at the 2016 World Aids Day commemoration with adolescents living with HIV, organised by the Lagos State Aids Control Agency, LSACA, in collaboration with Positive Action for Treatment Access, PATA.

She noted that since HIV was not contracted through physical contacts like hand-shaking or hugging, it was unnecessary to deliberately avoid people with the challenge.

She said: “I urge Lagos State Aids Control Agency to continue to sensitise the public, on the negative impact of discrimination against people living with HIV and AIDS.  All relevant government agencies should also work in synergy, to address issues that relate to stigma and discrimination against those persons.”

The governor’s wife who commended the LSACA and PATA for a two-week camping recently organised for young adolescents living with HIV advised the beneficiaries to follow expert advice, medical instructions, and to apply good discretion in their social interactions.

In his opening remarks, Olusheyi Temowo, chief executive officer of the LSACA, advised Lagosians to know their HIV status, stressing that the infection was not a death sentence.

Speaking in the same vein, Olubunmi Asa, the representative of United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDs, UNAIDS, said that the business of kicking out HIV was everyone’s business.

Asa said that though the level of awareness was high on the scourge, the task of eliminating it completely was not over, but with concerted effort, it could be achieved.

Also speaking, Francis Umoh, programme manager of the PATA, lamented that much of the social and psychological needs of the young adolescents living with HIV were not met, stressing that they should be embraced and not isolated, and medication made available to them.

Olufemi Onanuga, special adviser to the governor on Health, assured the adolescents living with the challenge, that they would not be abandoned by the state government.

—  Dec 12, 2016 @ 01:00 GMT

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