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Overview of HIVAIDS Epidemic in Nigeria

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3.1 million AIDS deaths in 2005. 25 million AIDS deaths since the start ... Cultural Factors e.g. leviriate, hyena practice, wife sharing, funeral wakes etc. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Overview of HIVAIDS Epidemic in Nigeria


1
Overview of HIV/AIDS Epidemic in Nigeria
  • Fred Tamen PhD
  • BSU

2
More than 38 Million living with HIV/AIDS
  • 38.6 million living with HIV
  • 4.9 million infected in 2005
  • 3.1 million AIDS deaths in 2005
  • 25 million AIDS deaths since the start of the
    epidemic

Eastern Europe Central Asia 1.5 million
W C Europe 2.0 million
North America 2.0 million
East Asia 870,000
N Africa Middle East 440,000
Caribbean 330,000
S SE Asia 8.3 million
Latin America 1.6 million
Sub-Saharan Africa 24.5 million
Oceania 78,000
3
Nigerias HIV/AIDS Country Profile
4
(No Transcript)
5
Median National HIV Prevalence 1992- 2005
6
HIV/AIDS An Unprecedented
Crisis
  • Strikes at the heart of development
  • Reverses human development gains
  • Kills people in their most productive years
  • Spreads and deepens poverty
  • Threatens government capacity to provide services
  • Deepens gender inequalities
  • Erodes social cohesion

7
An Interesting Overview of Impact of HIV/AIDS..
The impact of HIV/AIDS is unique because it
kills adults in the prime of their lives, thus
depriving families, communities, and entire
nations of their young and most productive
people. Adding to an already heavy disease burden
in poor countries, the HIV/AIDS is deepening
poverty, reversing human development
achievements, aggravating gender inequalities,
eroding the capacity of governments to provide
essential services, reducing labour productivity
and supply, and putting a brake on economic
growth. These worsening conditions in turn make
people even more vulnerable to infection and
undermine the ability of governments to respond
to the epidemic UNDP,2003 The Challenge We Face
8
The Drivers of the Epidemic
  • Cultural Factors e.g. leviriate, hyena practice,
    wife sharing, funeral wakes etc.
  • Commercial Sex work
  • Migration
  • Stigma and Discrimination
  • Gender issues
  • Poverty

9
Median HIV Prevalence by Zone, 2005
10
HIV Prevalence in South East Zone, 2005
11
HIV Prevalence in South West Zone, 2005
12
HIV Prevalence in North West Zone, 2005
13
HIV Prevalence in North East Zone, 2005
14
HIV Prevalence in North Central Zone, 2005
15
HIV Prevalence in South South Zone, 2005
16
Prevalence by Zone by Urban-Rural Areas, 2005
17
Prevalence in Urban-Rural Areas by State South
East Zone, 2005
18
Prevalence in Urban-Rural Areas by State South
West Zone, 2005
19
Prevalence in Urban-Rural Areas by State North
West Zone, 2005
20
Prevalence in Urban-Rural Areas by State North
East Zone, 2005
21
Prevalence in Urban-Rural Areas by State North
Central Zone, 2005
22
Prevalence in Urban-Rural Area by State South
South Zone, 2005
23
HIV Prevalence by Age Group, 2005
24
HIV Prevalence by Educational Status, 2005
25
Are people willing to know status?
  • People are still not willing to know their
    status.
  • Why?
  • Fear of stigma
  • Fear of death
  • Access to VCT services.
  • There are many advantages of knowing status

26
Youth Issues that Affect MMSexual Exploitation
  • Three forms Identified
  • Commercial Sexual exploitation,
  • Pornography and
  • Trafficking for sexual purposes.
  • It is difficult to know how many children are
    being exploited. This is because shame, stigma,
    fear of reprisal and lack of belief in the
    authorities means that many do not report sexual
    exploitation

27
Sexual Exploitation (Cont)
  • Globally, it has been found that up to 2 million
    children suffer sexual exploitation every year,
    the majority of them girls.
  • In Benue State, we recently did a study of
    orphans and vulnerable children. Many youths
    especially girls complained of sexual
    exploitation.
  • Factors responsible for Sexual exploitation
  • Erroneous belief that HIV cured by sleeping with
    a virgin

28
Sexual Exploitation (cont)
  • Sex tourism which targets children
  • Growing use of internet for child pornography
  • Increase in the international and organized
    criminal networks e.g. Niger Delta
  • Those exploited are Children who are the poor and
    the uneducated and those already marginalized
  • The effects of sexual exploitation on youths
    include unwanted pregnancies, severe physical and
    psychological trauma, including death, HIV/AIDS,
    other sexually transmitted diseases, maternal
    mortality

29
Substance Abuse
  • Alcohol.
  • Cannabis- marijuana
  • Stimulants e.g cocaine, amphetamines, pemoline,
    tea, coffee, kolanut, cigarette, tobacco etc.
  • Sedatives/Depressants eg valium, librum,
    ativan,lexotan, sonerly, madrax, anxiolytics and
    hypnosadatives.
  • Narcotic drugs e.g. heroin, morphine, pelludrine,
    codeine, opium
  • Hallucinogens eg LSD, mescaline
  • Inhalants (Volatile Solvents) e.g glue,
    petrol,gasoline, rubber solution, kerosine,
    aerosol, nail polish remover
  • Designer drugs
  • Anabolic steroids

30
Factors influencing substance use
  • Peer pressure.
  • Desire to experiment.
  • Personality defect.
  • Notion of machismo risk taking to prove oneself
    to friends.
  • Sibling exposure.
  • Employment outside the home for adolescents.
  • Social pathologies-eg Unemployment,
    under-employment.
  • Parental deprivations separation, divorce, death
    of spouse etc.
  • Advertising.
  • Rapid urbanisation

31
Use of Youths as Militia
  • Militia are like an occupation army. This is
    because they maim, rape, exploit, bully,
    constitute themselves into court judges etc.
  • This condition is not only peculiar to Benue or
    Nigeria alone. Why do they accept this role?
  • Some are recruited by force
  • Their support networks destroyed by war
  • Some join voluntarily to escape poverty, abuse or
    violence or are enticed by politicians.

32
Militia
  • The consequences are many.
  • They miss out on their education
  • More likely to drift into crime
  • Some come back without limbs
  • Girls are forced into being girlfriends and
    forced to use contraceptives or commit abortion
    when pregnant.

33
Street Children
  • In Benue State especially among the Tiv this is a
    new phenomenon.
  • There may be between 100 150 million street
    children in the world. In a recent UNDP survey in
    Benue and Kaduna states we found that street
    children are found almost every where.
  • They lose out on education, at risk of violence,
    poor health, targeted by police and vigilantes
  • They left home because of abuse, family break up

34
Other youth issues
  • Crime and punishment
  • Bullying and punishment
  • Conflict
  • Social expectations
  • Marriage and motherhood
  • Work
  • Disability
  • Education and having a voice.

35
How can we empower the Youths
  • Empowerment is a way of enabling people to gain
    control over their lives. It is an approach which
    helps people to identify their own concerns and
    gain the skills and confidence to act upon them.
    It is unique in being based on bottom up
    strategy and calls for different strategy from
    those charged with the responsibility of
    empowerment.

36
Empowerment (Cont).
  • For people to be empowered they need to
  • Recognize and understand their powerlessness
  • Feel strongly enough about their situation to
    want to change it
  • Feel capable of changing the situation by having
    information support and life skills.
  • Empowerment is also used to describe a way of
    working which increases peoples power to change
    their social reality. It includes a discussion
    of community development as a way of working
    which seeks to create active participating
    communities who are empowered and able to
    challenge and change the world about them. This
    may or may not include political consciousness
    raising.

37
Recommendations
  • A lot of recommendations have already been
    suggested in this workshop that if implemented
    will help our Benue Youths and help prevent
    maternal mortality in Benue.
  • The central issue is that of poverty alleviation.
  • Tied to above is youth employment
  • Education of our youths
  • Making our hospitals and clinics work well
  • Education of our leadership e.g on militia
  • Creating investment culture in our people eg
    people in Zaki Biam sell yams but squander the
    money on drinks.

38
THANK YOU
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