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NATIONAL POLICY ON HIV/AIDS
AND STD
RELATED ISSUES
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The existence of HIV/AIDS/STD poses
a serious challenge to human kind. To date, there is neither a vaccine
nor a cure for AIDS. It is now well known that the presence of STDs
predisposes the individual to HIV infection. Unfortunately, many STD
cases go undiagnosed and untreated.
HIV/AIDS is a
human development problem fueled by poverty, the inequality of certain
sectors of society, and the presence of other STDs. As a result, the
socio-cultural, economic as well as health determinants of the
transmission of HIV/AIDS/STD must be addressed. In formulating a
national policy for HIV/AIDS and STD related issued, the need arises to
incorporate the above as policy concerns as part of an action strategy
for future programmes.
A National Policy Document on
HIV/AIDS and STD, under the auspices of the Bangladesh STD Prevention
and Control Project, was compiled by a ‘Task Force’ in early 1995 with
the Chairman of the Technical Committee of the National AIDS Committee
as its convener. Its limitation lay in the fact that it could not delve
into all the issues with purported authority. This led to the formation
of a ‘Core Group’ drawn from all disciplines of the social health
strata. The group held a ‘Multi-Sectoral Consensus’ Workshop using
Visualization in Participatory Planning (VIPP) method on 8 & 9 October
1996 in which various stakeholder groups participated. The participants
reviewed and recommended necessary amendments and additions to the
National Policy Document which are reflected in this final draft.
Four Cross-cutting and priority
issues were given emphasis in the document. These were human rights,
gender, behaviour and information, education and communication (IEC).
The modern human rights movement envisaged in the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights (UDHR) offers public health a previously unavailable
instrument and approach for analyzing and responding to the societal
dimensions of the vulnerability to HIV/AIDS/STDs. Gender receives an
increasingly important dimension as women will account for almost half
of all the HIV infections by the year 2000. One cannot proceed with a
HIV/AIDS/STD policy by delinking women’s and men’s reproductive and
behaviural health issues.
Over the last few years, there
has been as attempt to differentiate between ‘high risk group’ and ‘high
risk behaviour’. Focusing attention on behaviour has proven more
effective, because it targets all who are vulnerable. AIDS information,
education and communication is an important strategy for HIV/AIDS
prevention. The use of powerful media –both electronic and print –must
be augmented to present balanced, informative and well judged news.
Media must shun prejudices and value judgments in line with fundamental
human rights and shape educative efforts to produce its impact on
behavioural changes.
The policy statement endorses
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) as a standard for
policy making and action at all levels in the response to HIV/AIDS and
STDs in Bangladesh. All the fundamental principles enshrined in the text
of UDHR are to be followed in pursuance of policy making.
As regards the HIV/AIDS/STD
Prevention and Control Programme, certain objectives and strategies have
been delineated. Among the objectives are to:
a) prevent HIV transmission;
b) reduce the impact of HIV/AIDS on
the individual and the community;
c) prevent transmission of STDs;
and
d) provide STD management.
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Among the strategies are:
a) prevention of sexual
transmission;
b) prevention of transmission
through blood and blood products;
c) prevention of parenteral
transmission;
d) prevention of vertical
transmission from mother to child; and
e) reduction of the impact of HIV
infection on individuals, communities and the societ
To carry out these specific
objectives and strategies, the national programme has been assigned to
several task formulating bodies with individual membership make-up and
terms of references. The committees are:
National AIDS Committeen
A multi-sectoral body with a strong
political commitment. It is an advisory body to the Government of
Bangladesh which oversees all the aspects related to HIV/AIDS and STDs.
Technical Committee of the National
AIDS Committee
The Technical Committee is a body
of experts supervising technical aspects of HIV/AIDS/STD prevention and
control and is the technical arm of the National AIDS Committee. In
addition the Technical Committee provides technical support to the
Coordination Committee.
Co-ordination Committee
This group or body performs as the link to the
tripartite coalition of NAC, MOH&FW and DGHS for smooth functioning in
policy formulation and implementation. It consists of coordinators of
surveillance, counselling, health education, blood transfusion,
sterilization, nursing, case management, laboratories, primary health
care and reproductive health services.
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