Friday, December 4, 2009

Red Alarm In Copenhagen



By Jens Galschiot,Copenhagen
Thousands of red LED lamps will mark a 7-meters water rising during the COP15 climate summit. The art happening Sevenmeters.net is a visualisation by Jens Galschiot, about how Copenhagen will look like, when all the ice of Greenland has melted away.
Galschiot and his volunteers, armed with long ladders, will this Saturday and Sunday hang up the LED lamps. They will start by the three big 'refugees' on Vejlands Allé / Ørestads Boulevard by the Bella Center. The 2,000 LED lamps are specially made in the artist’s workshop of bicycle lamps, which are soldered and glued together with extra batteries, so the will be able to blink constantly during the meeting.
The artist, who is well-known for his poignant - yet audience-friendly, art manife¬sta¬tions, got the permission to put up all of the blinking lights in a 7 meter line above daily water, around the lakes and in the whole channel area in the center of Copenhagen, and along the roads to the Bella Center. Galschiot hopes that the red blinking LED-lights will be some sort of an international grassroots’ symbol of the climate catastrophe.
With the happening Galschiot will visualise, that when the water rises and drought expands, there will be many places where people no longer will be able to stay. For example the isle of Amager, where the Climate Summit is held, will be 5 meters under water, if Greenland’s ice melts. If the ice of Antarctica also melts, the water will rise another 75 meters, so the peaks of the mountains will be in great demand, and there are not plenty of them in Denmark.
”With this manifestation I will highlight the climate crisis, and the fact, that it is not only a problem for the polar bears and the nature. The global warming may be a catastrophe for humanity. UN says that over 200 million refugees will be a reality in the next 40 years.
The refugees will trigger a giant demographic crisis, with risks of closing the national borders and beginning an ‘all against all fight, to protect our territory against the refugees, which our own CO2 leak has created. A frightening scenario that will put our humanistic and democratic civilisation under intense pressure, so that war and rise of totalitarian systems might be the consequence. This is the legacy that we will leave to our children!” Galschiot says.
At the venue of the climate summit there will also be red blinking LED lamps. Small badges will be given to the delegates, so they can use them as a silent indicator about how seriously they take the climate crisis.

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

WORLD AIDS DAY 2009


Courage and leadership must continue in the AIDS response, urges Alliance Executive Director, Alvaro Bermejo. Writing from Cambodia, Alvaro says the benefits of committed partnerships are clear to see this World AIDS Day, a sign which he believes should inspire stakeholders to recommit to fighting the spread and the impact of HIV.I write this from Cambodia, a country that in spite of ranking 137 in the Human Development Index has already achieved its Millennium Development Goal target of halving HIV prevalence. This is a country that despite a weak health infrastructure has managed to provide antiretroviral treatment to over 90% of those who need it.
The secret of this success? It’s been done through the strongest partnership I’ve come across in my travels for the Alliance. A coalition of affected communities, expert patients, health professionals, NGOs, government, donors and researchers who have come together to fight the epidemic.
Unprecedented partnerships have been formed all over the world in our efforts to tackle HIV and it is paying off. The latest data shows new HIV infections are down by 17% with the greatest progress made in the hardest hit region of sub-Saharan Africa. HIV prevention programmes are making a difference and thanks to the availability of treatment more people are living longer and AIDS-related deaths are down.
But the global economic crisis and conflicting priorities are putting these partnerships and this progress at risk. Funding for HIV prevention is still the smallest proportion of national AIDS budgets and many programmes are not targeting those most in need or most at risk. There are also worrying signs in some countries that governments might be about to put in place legal frameworks that further institutionalize discrimination against groups most at risk. Discrimination against sex workers, drug users and men who have sex with men violates human rights, fuels the epidemic, and undermines cost-effective interventions.
The economic crisis might provide the incentive for a scenario of increased solidarity to emerge. One in which NGOs focus on developing more efficient and sustainable responses, work with committed political leaders to create policy space for focused prevention interventions and introduce legal frameworks that reduce long-term vulnerability; a scenario where donors and the international community find creative ways to close the financial gap that countries are facing and resource health systems, through innovative financing, such as introducing a currency transaction levy or other forms of financial taxes.
But the other extreme scenario isn’t appealing. It is one in which donors and political elites reduce their financial commitments, are unwilling to take the difficult decisions that efficient, focused HIV prevention requires, and row back on commitments to universal access to HIV prevention, treatment, care and support; a scenario in which NGOs take to confrontation and people living with HIV abandon their active involvement and solidarity that has been crucial to our response to HIV.
What is in no doubt, is we are going to have a ‘new’ response emerging from the economic crisis. Whether it is a creative one that builds on increased solidarity or a destructive one that weakens these partnerships depends on the leadership each one of us shows.
World AIDS Day is a good opportunity to remind us to continue to show dynamic, innovative and courageous leadership. The fantastic integration between healthcare services with NGOs and faith-based organisations running home and community care programmes that I see here in Cambodia and elsewhere around the world can inspire the vision we all need.
Let’s make this World AIDS Day an opportunity to recommit ourselves to continue to fight the spread and impact of HIV, and to hold governments to account for any failure to protect their citizens’ human rights.
Alvaro Bermejo, Executive Director:
"What is in no doubt, is we are going to have a ‘new’ response emerging from the economic crisis".

In Another News, The Population Council Has Advanced Access to Services for Populations Most Vulnerable to HIV.
Men who have sex with men (MSM) remain extremely vulnerable to HIV and AIDS, particularly in the many developing countries where their sexual behavior is criminalized. Harmful policies, a lack of targeted health information, and widespread stigma and discrimination--even at the hands of health providers--continue to stand in the way of the goal of universal access to HIV-related services.

The Population Council is committed to reducing HIV infection and transmission among MSM by increasing access to prevention, treatment and care services through our innovative research strategies and program approaches. Council researchers identify and describe the risk behaviors of this often hard-to-reach population, test interventions for expanding access to HIV-related services, and raise awareness among governments and program planners through high profile meetings and dissemination efforts. Our research is getting attention, and, most importantly, it is making an impact.

In recognition of World AIDS Day, we invite you to view a slide show, which highlights the important work we are doing with MSM in Nigeria. You will also find the moving personal stories of Patrick, Samuel, and Adeolu, just a few examples of young men whose lives we have changed.

These are just a few examples of how the Council is contributing to the worldwide effort to foster universal access to HIV services as a basic human right, with a special focus on vulnerable populations. We encourage you to read more about our work on our website.

Saturday, May 23, 2009

Pr. Leopoldo Robellato exchanges with FFF Cameroon



The President of the International NGO, Incontro FraI Popoli of Cittadella, Italy, Professor Leopoldo Robellato, held a working session with the Programmes Manager of the Fine Forest Foundation – Cameroon, James Achanyi-Fontem, at the Missions Procure General of Akwa-Douala on May 22.
FFF Cameroon Programmes Manager was accompanied by Trustee Anna Nven, one of the Commissioners of account of the organisation, to present the charity's activities coordinated from its headquarters at Nchou Njeh in Lebialem Division of the south west region of Cameroon.
In effect, Professor Leopoldo Robellato was delegated by Father Silvio Turrazzi, the founder of Associazione Muungano in Parma, Italy to investigate on the visibility of the operations of Fine Forest Foundation Cameroon by tracing its history, activities undertaken, on-going projects, management policies, community projects orientation, beneficiary target groups, impact and community involvement approaches.
The programmes manager told Professor Leopoldo Robellato that Fine Forest Foundation is a national NGO covering the whole territory of Cameroon with Lebialem Division being the pilot site of its activities due to the assert in Menji for expansion and rural communities outreach. He added that FFF Cameroon's head quarters at Nchou Njeh has plans to house a Galenic Laboratory, while the land assert located in Menji, Nveh, Ncheh Mbin, Njeh, Barombikang, Mbalangi and Bombe is reserved for planting medicinal plants that would be transformed into pharmaceuticals in the future.
The envoy of Father Silvio Turrazzi asked how large the FFF organisation is and if it had legal frame documents. The list of the board of trustees and the legal frame work documents were presented. He asked about the specialist who was going to assist in setting up the galenic laboratory project and was informed that Dr. Ajuah Nkohkwo, who lived in Italy for several years working on pharmaceutical in puts and out puts was champion of the initiative, though the community populations were involved in the production of rural materials like medicinal plants, planting and harvesting before transformation.
The project will associate the traditional healers in the collection and transformation of special species. When questioned on what the project is expected to cost, James Achanyi-Fontem, guided Professor Leopoldo Robellato on project strategy, cost and time frame already established covering the period from 2009 - 2012.
On collaboration with the government, FFF Cameroon presented documents and pictures of realizations, training and community awareness campaigns undertaken during Commonwealth professional internships in London and Cameroon with the health library set up within the Azi District Hospital to serve staff and the public for information and consultation purposes.
Concerning social inclusion and integration of orphaned children, Prof. Leopoldo Robellato, was told that the best gift children in Africa need is education, and this explains why FFF Cameroon assists in paying school fees of under-advantaged children in poor families and orphaned children. The donation of multi-purpose grinning mills to well structured women’s organisations for empowering them economically was highlighted as an on-going annual initiative.
The girl-children not capable of continuing education for one reason or the other are introduced into micro-enterprise learning activities, which lead them to self-employment after training as apprentices. The above presentation ended with a small album of FFF cameroon past activities explaining vibrant impact activities presented during the working session.
Who is Prof. Leopoldo Robellato ?
Prof. Leopoldo Robellato is a biologist and retired University lecturer of Bologne,Italy. He stopped lecturing four years ago to start solidarity and humanitarian work as new occupation through the Italian NGO “Incontro Fra I Popoli” chaired by him. He had worked in Yagoua, north region of Cameroon for four years from 1983 before moving to the Democratic Republic of Congo and other parts of the world.
His international humanitarian organisation operates in partnership with the European Union and he is currently supervising projects in Cameroon (Bafia, Mbouda & Ngaoundere), Chad, Democratic Republic of Congo, Senegal, Niger, Nepal, Peru, Romania and Sri Lanka.
The president of “Incontro Fra I Popoli” said his organisation is involved in the promotion of international solidarity through cooperation and reciprocity based on partnership. Within the partnership, emphasis is put on the sharing of experiences of the same mission with the civil society organisations working or engaged in development programmes and projects with their own human and technical resources.
According to Professor Leopoldo Robellato, both parties assist mutually, cooperate at the same level, receive and give advice and together a new world is built. The convergence through partnership starts with the objective of projects, the elaboration of a joint strategy, sharing of responsibilities, the consolidation of reciprocity links and both parties consider themselves as agents of development at the level of their respective populations.
With this approach, there is no limit to partnership. The president of “Incontro Fra I Popoli” said, that his organisation does not accept any partnership that aims at the execution of a project by an individual. To get involved, his organisation starts with new links of partnership and sharing of competence and responsibility. This approachhe added, is linked to the start of new collaboration.
At the end of the session, Professor Leopoldo Robellato, observed that the health development package of FFF Cameroon presented at the Procure General of Akwa-Douala could be estimated to cost a total of 100.000 Euros. He acknowledges that Fine Forest Foundation Cameroon is considered by him as a stable and well structured civil society organisation with visible development impact.
He explained that before leaving Italy, he intended to travel to Lebialem to inspect the project site at Nchou Njeh, but his very busy schedule and change in flight itinerary modified his intention. He lauded the efforts and the fact that a meeting took place for the presentation especially as the impact of health initiatives realized and planned for the future were made visible.
Professor Leopoldo Robellato can be contacted through the following address: Incontro Fra I Popoli, via Pezze, 16 – 35013 Cittadella(PD), Italia Tel/fax: 0039 049 597 53 38 Cell: 335 836 7012 Email:info@incontrofraipopoli.it

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Youth HIV Education In Cameroon Colleges


HIV/AIDS EDUCATION IN SECONDARY SCHOOLS
By James Achanyi-Fontem, Cameroon Link
Yvonne Fonduh Bekeny has published her findings on HIV/AIDS education in secondary schools in Cameroon within the frame work of a study of Government Bilingual High Schools in the capital city of Yaoundé. Yvonne is a master’s degree in development and international cooperation graduate of the UNIVERSITY OF JYVÄSKYLÄ, (Department of Education Sciences) Finland.
The study describes secondary school students’ knowledge, attitudes and behaviour in relation to HIV/AIDS and compares these aspects in two Government Bilingual High Schools in Yaoundé-Cameroon. One school ran a formal HIV/AIDS education programme and the other did not. Factors influencing students’ attitudes towards people living with HIV/AIDS (PLHIV) and their trusted sources of HIV/AIDS knowledge were examined.
618 students participated in the survey with ages ranged from 10 to 25 and the average age was 15. The data was collected in November 2008 and findings indicated that students in the two schools are quite knowledgeable about modes of HIV prevention and transmission, while more students in the intervention school are conversant with facts.
There were no differences in attitudes towards PLHIV observed in both schools. Students of the intervention school reported more positive attitudes towards condoms than those of the no-intervention school. Girls demonstrated more discrimination towards PLHIV than boys and religion has an impact on attitudes toward PLHIV.
Students trusted doctors/nurses, parents and teachers as important sources of HIV/AIDS knowledge. The research showed that HIV/AIDS interventions actually impact moderate behaviour changes, but there is weak correlation between HIV/AIDS education and attitudes towards PLHIV.
This calls for vigorous input into the formal HIV/AIDS intervention, targeting specific behavioural aspects and perhaps qualitative approaches to understanding the drivers of students’ attitudes. Yvonne Fonduh Bekeny suggests that parents should be more involved in the process of HIV/AIDS education as well.
Genesis
Since its discovery, the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) has spread more rapidly than most diseases in recent history, having social-cultural, economical and moral repercussions on individuals, families, communities and threatening foundations of entire societies. Over the years, the link between HIV/AIDS and impoverishment has grown and even stronger as the disease is infecting and affecting the younger generation who are the productive labour force of every economy. An estimated 11.8 million young people aged 15–24 are living with HIV/AIDS, and half of all new infections, over 6,000 daily, are occurring among them (The Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS, UNAIDS, 2003).
Africa is still the highest hit region with 63% of global infections and the highest prevalence among the age group 15-49 (UNAIDS, 2003). The international community has come to acknowledge that HIV/AIDS is not only a health problem. It is a developmental disaster of alarming proportions which will affect development goals at the human, financial and material levels.
In Cameroon, the prevalence has generally been stagnating and the WHO (2005) observes that young people in Cameroon are highly affected. Indeed, a third of Cameroonians infected are 15-29 years of age. This age group constitutes all Cameroonians who are in secondary school, high school, University, vocational schools, professional schools and those in active service. Cameroon has a population of about 18,175.000 million, (WHO Cameroon, 2009).
According to UNAIDS (2008), HIV adult prevalence stands at 5,5%. The number of people living with HIV/AIDS (PLHIV) is 543,295. The number of infections for those aged 15-24 years is 3,2%, 44.813 children aged 0-14 are living with HIV and children orphaned by AIDS related diseases amount to 305,000. Deaths related to AIDS infections are 43,632.
In their article, Mbanya, Martyn & Paul (2008) state that the socio-economic impact of the disease is profound with growing numbers of sectors being affected, and high hospital bed occupancy rampant. They add that this results in overstretched medical personnel and extra burden to the health and education sectors where school teachers are reported to be unproductive
on several counts and morbidity increasing from opportunistic infections. This of course, poses a major challenge to the socio-economic development of the country considering the fact that the age group below 15 makes up about 42% of the entire population (Population Reference Bureau, 2009).
Although the government of Cameroon has been quite committed in the fight against HIV/AIDS, especially in the domain of providing Anti Retro Viral (ARV) drugs and care and support of people living with HIV/AIDS, it has been observed that prevalence among the 15-24 years old is staggering, and they still remain the highest risk group in Cameroon.
Children infected and affected by HIV/AIDS are more likely to drop out of school at some point in time. The entire school systems are themselves affected by HIV/AIDS, 95% of HIV positive teachers have difficulties with punctuality in school and 73% of them affirm that they have to stop lessons from time to time when they are not physically fit. Up to 67% of students living with HIV face similar problems. (UNESCO Cameroon, 2007). These circumstances make it difficult for students to have a decent education.
The Paranoid situation created by this pandemic is putting the entire educational systems and the society at large under pressure. The education system must be supported through prevention, for education is the major driver of economic and social development. Indeed, countries education sectors have a strong potential to make a difference in the fight against HIV/AIDS (Bundy 2002). Prevention and coping strategies can only be ensured through education for it is a reality that with the present state of scientific knowledge and development, the only protection available to society is through education (Kelly, 2004).
The youth were the focus of this study because they are the future driving force of the economy and their well being will improve every aspect of the nation’s development, including demographic aspects such as life expectancy, which is currently at 50 years (UNDP, 2008). During my years as a teacher, I realized that most students infected or orphaned by AIDS related causes, could not afford school requirements and they were also under a lot of psychological pressure as a result of stigma and discrimination. Consequently, some students who were infected and affected were perpetual absentees because of the social effects, exclusion, anxieties and impoverishment perpetrated by the AIDS epidemic.
These experiences have moved me to research on HIV/AIDS education and its relevance to secondary school students as one means to disenable the vicious cycle of trauma, impoverishment and disease stimulated by HIV/AIDS. This is an attempt to mitigate the impact of the pandemic on the students in particular and on the educational system in general. It is also important because
halting the spread of HIV is not only a Millennium Development Goal (MDG) in itself, but a prerequisite for reaching other MDGs (UNESCO, 2006). Thus, if Cameroon is to achieve Education for All (EFA) and other MDGs by 2015, education at this stage must incorporate# aspects of HIV/AIDS. The Global Campaign for Education (GCE) has observed that education
can have a dramatic effect on the health of a nation. Girls and boys who complete primary school are 50% less likely to be infected with HIV, implying that 7 million cases of HIV could be prevented in a decade by the achievement of EFA (GCE, 2007).
The UNAIDS Cameroon (2008) country report concludes that there is less emphasis on national prevention programmes and much attention is focused on treatment and care of PLHIV. The International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPE) indicates that HIV/AIDS is still a problem in Cameroon especially for young women and girls. They further that stigma and discrimination is a distinct problem in Cameroon (IPPF, 2007). This issue is emphasized by Njechu (2008) who reports that the non-collection of HIV results after screening has been blamed for the increase in HIV incidences in Cameroon. His report was based on information from the Yaoundé based Institute of Behavioural Research (IRESCO) who warned that only 7% of young people aged 15-24 who went for voluntary testing collected their results.
The research revealed that many who did the screening test and failed to collect their results either feared stigmatization or imminent death if they were HIV positive. The research also stated that only a few Cameroonians within this age group go in for voluntary testing.
For more information, contact researcher by email: bekeny@yahoo.fr

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Breastfeeding Summit 2009


1st Annual Summit on Breastfeeding in June 2009 is 25th Anniversary of Surgeon General’s Workshop on Breastfeeding and Human Lactation
By Irene Rayman
Academy of Breastfeeding
Experts in maternal and infant health and health policy leaders from the Obama Administration in the United States of America will present timely information and recommendations for new policy initiatives to support a national breastfeeding agenda at the 1st Annual Summit on Breastfeeding, to take place June 11-12, in Washington, D.C. The Summit, "First Food: The Essential Role of Breastfeeding," is being presented by the Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine, and its official peer-reviewed journal, Breastfeeding Medicine, published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. ( www.liebertpub.com/bfm) and supported by a grant from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation.
The Summit marks the 25th anniversary of the Surgeon General's Workshop on Breastfeeding and Human Lactation, hosted in June 1984 for the first time by then Surgeon General C. Everett Koop, MD, and chaired by Ruth Lawrence, MD, currently Editor-in-Chief of Breastfeeding Medicine and Professor of Pediatrics at the Unversity of Rochester School of Medicine, who will once again both have central roles in this gathering of eminent researchers, clinicians, and key policymakers.
Participants will focus on the development of health policy solutions for improving breastfeeding rates, removing barriers to breastfeeding, and eliminating health disparities by better supporting the health needs of underserved mothers and their vulnerable children. Breastfeeding represents a cost-effective, easily accessible, low-tech solution to reducing infant mortality rates-the U.S. ranks 29th in the world-decreasing morbidity, and improving both immediate and long-term health issues for mothers and their young children.
The Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine (www.bfmed.org) is a global organization of physicians dedicated to the promotion, protection, and support of breastfeeding through education, research, and advocacy. It promotes the development and dissemination of clinical practice guidelines.
Breastfeeding Medicine is an authoritative, peer-reviewed, multidisciplinary journal published quarterly. The Journal publishes original scientific articles, reviews, and case studies on a broad spectrum of topics in lactation medicine. It presents evidence-based research advances and explores the immediate and long-term outcomes of breastfeeding, including the epidemiologic, physiologic, and psychological benefits of breastfeeding.
Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., (www.liebertpub.com) is a privately held, fully integrated media company known for establishing authoritative peer-reviewed journals in many promising areas of science and biomedical research, including Journal of Women's Health, Journal of Gynecologic Surgery, and Pediatric Asthma, Allergy and Immunology. Its biotechnology trade magazine, Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News (GEN), was the first in its field and is today the industry's most widely read publication worldwide. A complete list of the firm's 60 journals, books, and newsmagazines is available at www.liebertpub.com
New Rochelle, NY, April 27, 2009

Sunday, March 1, 2009

HIV-related Stigma Research With Nursing Students



HIV Related Stigma Survey Among Nursing Students In Cameroon Takes Off
James Achanyi-Fontem,
Cameroon Link
Dr. Neal Rosenburg of Goldfarb School of Nursing, Barnes Jewish College and Pr. Donna Taliaferro of the Washington University at St. Louis, USA started working in Douala, Cameroon on March 1, 2009 on a planned HIV-related stigma survey among nursing students in Cameroon.
During the academic working visit, Dr. Neal Rosenburg and Pr. Donna Taliaferro are visiting nursing colleges in Douala, Nkongsamba, Buea and Limbe to collect data on stigma among nursing students. The data will be analyzed and compared with a similar operation at the Washington University at St. Louis. An investigation on how to ameliorate on the care for HIV orphans will be conducted with the objective of encouraging nursing students in the USA to work out strategies for supporting orphans in Cameroon.
The visiting medical professionals gave a conference at the Complexe Universitaire EFPSA, INSAM, ISSAS at Ndokoti, Douala on Friday, March 6, 2009 and audiences were accorded leaders of associations in Cameroon working for the improvement of the well being of HIV orphans the audiences aim at the exchange of experiences for research of areas of capacity building care delivery and support tothe vulnerable childred of Cameroon. The activities were conducted with the technical support of the University of Buea and Cameroon Link Human Assistance Programme in Douala.
Objectives:
1. Identify different aspects of experiences among culturally diverse populations of HIV positive individuals.
2. Understand circumstances affecting culturally appropriate care for HIV positive clients.
3. Analyze the impact of perceptions among nursing students on global healthcare issues surrounding HIV nursing.
4. Describe the impact of associated stigma relating to nurses caring for HIV positive populations.
5. Explain the intention to deliver quality patient care to HIV positive clients.
Stigma as a concept is associated with various societal and personal attributes and attitudes. The deficit of a clearly accepted definition contributes to the prblematic nature of measuring the impact and outcomes of stigma in the research setting. A repetitive element in the definition of stigma is that of a mark, or a well defined stain on or associated with an individual. This proposes a stain on the individual’s character which may transcend to the interpersonal and societal levels. However, the common usages of the definition exclude a redundant usage of the term in the context of behavior, culture, and physical attributes that are also associated with stigma.
Historically, the Greeks utilized the term stigma in the context of a physical blemish designated to identify something morally curious about a member of society. In the Greek culture, the identifiable mark was cut or burned into the physical body. This form of representation clearly identified a marked individual within a particular societal text (Goffman, 1963). The dominant or unmarked members of society could easily differentiate themselves by being free from the mark or stain which suggested a violation of a code or a representation of societal status such as a slave or a criminal. Goffman (1963) has explained stigma in terms of a tainted or discounted individual. The negative connotations of these attributes equate to the differences between what society presumes in terms of common or acceptable characteristics of a person. The problematic nature of this definition arises as the attribute itself is not discrediting, rather it is the variance between the individual and the societal influence.
The contemporary usage of this concept relies heavily on the original meaning; however, today the individual’s stigmatizing identifier may indeed be invisible to the rest of society, such as with the case of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). According Goffman (1963), three abundantly different types of stigma exist. The first, he referred as abominations of the body that account for physical defects identified to an individual.
Next, Dr. Neal Rosenburg described the blemishes of individual character. These traits are possessed by weak individuals as well as individuals with unnatural desires. Lastly, he proposed tribal stigma. This category of individuals share unique characteristics acquired via lineage such as race, ethnicity, and religion. Stigma is present throughout all societies. The nature and harm of stigma are uniform; however, the degree and circumstances of stigma vary among societies and cultural groups. Regardless of the context, the concept of stigma produces destructive effects. Blame, shame, fear, personal injury, violence, and death account for potential effects of stigma. The potential for both physical and emotional damage to the individual underscores the importance of this concept. In addition, the efforts of changing the defining attitudes of stigma pose unique challenges. Many attitudes attached to contemporary stigma are deeply engrained in the societal norms, the familial values, and the cultural mores of an individual. The changing tapestry of the American society requires a shift in attention to that of multiculturism. Regarding multi-cultural groups, HIV, and stigma, Burrage & Rocchiociolli (2003) reported that the understanding of multiculturism and stigma within the context of interventions accessible to the various groups of people infected with HIV is paramount.
The act of discrimination against an individual or group discerned to be deviant, unacceptable, or inferior is enacted stigma (Scambler & Hopkins, 1986). The critical attribute of enacted stigma is prejudice. Prejudice is defined as “preconceived opinion that is not based on reason or actual experience” (Concise Oxford Dictionary, 2006, p. 697). An essential aspect of the phenomenon of prejudice includes a social orientation towards whole groups of people and/or towards individuals because of their association is a member of a particular group (Brown, 1995).
Methods for measuring this concept are available but restrictive. The outcomes of stigma are merely identified, questionnaires offer a rank-order aspect of the degree of certain pieces of stigma within select populations, and finally a limited number of studies have been published to determine other components or constructs involved with this complex concept. A workable instrument with proven reliability and validity would strengthen the studies on stigma as well as properly place this concept in the forefront of attention with an instrument that can be utilized across various populations and translated into many languages to gauge the scope and impact of stigma among nursing students.
Study Design
This cross sectional research design will be implemented among nursing students at the University of Douala, the University of Dschang in Cameroon, West Africa and Goldfarb School of Nursing at Barnes Jewish College in St. Louis, MO, USA. Nursing students enrolled in the eighth semester (last semester of nursing clinicals) will be sampled by convenience method. The nursing students will complete the HASI-NS (HIV/AIDS Stigma Instrument – Nursing Students). This researcher modified instrument is intended as a pilot implementation as it appears to be unused within the student nursing population. This instrument is a modified version on the HASI-N (HIV/AIDS Stigma Instrument – Nurse) developed Uys, Holzemer, Chirwa, Dlamini, Greeff, Kohi, et al. with supported funds from the NIH and the Fogarty International Center. This instrument utilizes 20 items concerning behaviors, communication, and perceptions addressed to
nursing students in the clinical setting. The data will be cleaned, coded and analyzed using SPSS v.16. The results of this study will acknowledge the perceptions of Cameroonian and American nursing students who provide patient care or will be faced with delivering patient care to the growing population of diverse HIV positive patients. The results of this study will be disseminated at national conferences as well as provide the framework for manuscript submission to peer-reviewed journals. Most notably, the data from this pilot study will begin the rigorous process of establishing reliability and validity within new instrument development with the intent to expand to larger studies gauging HIV related stigma among nursing students across both continents.
Nurses are an integral part of the global health care picture as we rapidly move into an era of multi-cultures, multi-languages, and multiple illnesses that reinforce the acts of stigma. Most notably, it is important to remember that nurses are not excluded from harboring and delivering the devastating acts of stigma. In increase in awareness and education will serve as the weapons of choice for nurses of the twenty-first century to combat the destructive forces of stigmatization. As nurse researchers, the nursing science will accelerate the process via methods devoted to exploring strategies at the intervention levels with an ultimate outcome of diminishing current levels of stigma while greatly ameliorating the quality of delivered nursing care when working with marginalized groups facing the many faces of stigma
Timeline
April – June, 2009: data management/analyze data in St. Louis, MO, USA.
June – August, 2009: dissemination of study findings.
References
Brown, R. (1995). Prejudice: Its social psychology. Oxford: Blackwell.
Burrage, J., & Rocchiociolli, J. (2003). HIV related stigma: Implications for multicultural nursing. Journal of Multicultural Nursing and Health, 9(1), 13-17.
Concise Oxford American dictionary, (2006). New York: Oxford Press.
Goffman, E. (1963). Stigma: Notes on the management of spoiled identity. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
Scambler, G., & Hopkins, A. (1986). Being epileptic: Coming to terms with stigma. Sociology of Health and Illness, 8, 26-43.

Friday, February 6, 2009

Breastfeeding Guidelines


Breastfeeding Guidelines Now Available on US Gov’t Website
By Karla Shepard Rubinger,
Executive Director, Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine,
Tel:(914) 740-2100, ext. 2153,
Email: abm@bfmed.org
The Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine’s (ABM) clinical protocols for the care of breastfeeding mothers and infants are now available for physicians, nurses, and other healthcare professionals on the US National Guideline Clearinghouse (NGC) website.
The US NGC, an initiative of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, the federal agency responsible for improving the quality, safety, efficiency, and effectiveness of healthcare, offers providers a comprehensive database of clinical practice guidelines covering a wide range of diseases and conditions, from “animal diseases” to “viral diseases.” Essentially these guidelines serve as prescriptions to assist providers in the delivery of healthcare.
Now, with the twelve newly listed ABM protocols on the NGC website, providers have breastfeeding recommendations, strategies, and other information at their fingertips, contributing to appropriate and standardized postpartum care. It is well-documented that optimal breastfeeding practices are associated with health benefits for both infant and mother.
“ABM are excited to be involved and associated with NGC, and ABM looks forward to continuing to serve the community of healthcare professionals by providing tools to enable the best possible care of breastfeeding families,” says Kathie Marinelli, MD, FABM, Co-Chair of the ABM Protocol Committee.
According to Cynthia Howard, MD, MPH, FABM, Associate Professor of Pediatrics at the University of Rochester, and member of the ABM Executive Committee, “NGC acceptance is a mark of the high quality of ABM protocols.” In particular, ABM protocols are developed by multidisciplinary teams of physicians who have expertise in the field, and are based on a rigorous review of the medical literature.
The development, dissemination, and use of current clinical practice guidelines remains a priority for ABM. As the only international organization of physicians in this field, ABM also provides translations of many protocols into Spanish, Korean, Chinese, and German, as well as English.
The Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine (www.bfmed.org) is a worldwide organization of physicians dedicated to the promotion, protection and support of breastfeeding and human lactation through education, research, and advocacy. An independent, self-sustaining, international physician organization and the only organization of its kind, ABM’ s mission is to unite members of various medical specialties through physician education, expansion of knowledge in breastfeeding science and human lactation, facilitation of optimal breastfeeding practices, and encouragement of the exchange of information among organizations.
For more information on the National Guideline Clearinghouse, and for a complete list of the ABM Protocol Guideline Collection please visit www.guideline.gov.

Monday, January 26, 2009

ABM Holds Annual International Meeting in November 2009


14th Annual International Meeting of the
Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine planned for November 6-8, 2009
The 14th Annual International Meeting of the Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine (ABM) (www.bfmed.org) has been announced for Williamsburg, Virginia from November 6-8, 2009. The meeting hold under the theme “Breastfeeding: Lessons from History, Implications for Tomorrow.” World-class speakers will provide key research materials on current and critical issues in breastfeeding medicine. ABM speakers are among leaders of clinical medicine and research in the world of breastfeeding and human lactation. The meeting will focus on the most authoritative and up-to-date clinical information on breastfeeding, spanning both maternal and child health issues. A significant educational opportunity, the ABM Annual International Meeting is an ideal context for physicians, and other healthcare providers to continue their professional education in a highly respected stimulating environment, while earning continuing education credits. This year’s meeting will also include the updated one-day breastfeeding medicine course, “What Every Physician Needs To Know About Breastfeeding” on November 5, 2009.
“The Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine’s Annual International Meeting allows physicians from all over the world to network and hear the latest basic research, public health, and clinical information about breastfeeding and human lactation,” says Conference Chair, Michelle Brenner, MD. Visit the Academy’s website regularly for the most up-to-date information on the meeting ( www.bfmed.org).
The official journal of ABM, Breastfeeding Medicine (www.liebertpub.com/bfm ), now in its fourth year, will publish the selected Conference Abstracts. With growing demands for the best evidence-based research, this interdisciplinary journal provides the international medical and scientific community with the latest peer-reviewed reports of laboratory, field, and clinical investigations, with special emphasis on the risks of not breastfeeding. A free sample issue is available at www.liebertpub.com/bfm
The Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine (www.bfmed.org) is a worldwide organization of physicians dedicated to the promotion, protection, and support of breastfeeding and human lactation through education, research, and advocacy. An independent, self-sustaining, international physician organization and the only organization of its kind, ABM’ s mission is to unite members of various medical specialties through physician education, expansion of knowledge in breastfeeding science and human lactation, facilitation of optimal breastfeeding practices, and encouragement of the exchange of information among organizations.
Issued in New Rochelle, NY, January 26, 2009
The Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine,
140 Huguenot St., 3rd floor,
New Rochelle, NY 10801-521(800) 990.4ABM
Tel:(914) 740.2115 Fax: (914) 740.2101
Email: abm@bfmed.org Website:www.bfmed.org

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Development and International Cooperation


Yvonne Bekeny Ends Development Cooperation Internship At Cameroon Link
By Alice Ndeloh
Cameroon Link
The second phase of development cooperation internship of Yvonne Bekeny was packed full of activities out of Cameroon Link office. Yvonne moved from the community into the school environment to collect data for her thesis. The capital city of Yaoundé was the venue to meet the youth target population for her study. It was a very challenging exercise because it was the first time she was collecting data for analysis later. It was less strenuous because securing research permit was not as difficult as her research assistant had anticipated. On the other hand the schools were so big, with large numbers on roll that distributing the questionnaires was a bit difficult and even more so because students could not work individually as she had expected given the large numbers on roll. Despite these hindrances, she was able to administer the number of questionnaires required for her study.
After working with students for on week she returned to the office in Douala to continue administrative work and reviewing some reports and also assembling material that was to be used at an up coming workshop organized by the Cameroon Ministry of Public health on infant and young child feeding counselling in Obala, 100 kms from Yaounde on the road to Bafoussam. The preparations led to Yvonne Bekeny attending the week-long workshop as representative if the Chief Executive Office of Cameroon Link. The workshop was attended by representatives of some fourteen Non-Governmental Organizations, Faith Based Organizations and Community Based Organizations involved in the promotion and protection of breastfeeding and infant and young feeding rights in Cameroon. It was facilitated by professional medical staff from the ministry of public health, social workers and nutrition counselling consultants.
It was during the interactive exchanges at the workshop that they were taught the advantages and the benefits of breastfeeding to the baby and the mother. The discussed the health benefits, the economic benefits to the entire family and the community. It was repeated echoed that if the mothers breastfed exclusively for six months, their babies’ health was guaranteed, therefore the family saved money that would otherwise have been used for artificial feeding. Breastfeeding has no cost and helped reduce spending and was seen as a poverty alleviation ingredient that also safe guarded the family income.
● Yvonne and her colleagues at the workshop were equipped with negotiation skills on how to approach women and convince them to practice exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months after birth and how they could also encourage women to begin introducing complimentary feeding from the age of six months while continuing breastfeeding up to 24 months.. They were informed that it was easy to meet women in their community groups, in the community health facilities and also in the district hospitals to address these issues. With the creation of WABA Men’s initiative, it was decided that the men or fathers and youths be involved in the breastfeeding campaign movement because the mothers would need their support if breastfeeding practices are to be successful.
The issue of breastfeeding in the context of HIV/AIDS was also discussed lengthily. The facilitators told the participants about the advantages and disadvantages of breastfeeding when a woman is HIV positive. Statistics were quite revealing and Yvonne was equipped with the facts about breastfeeding in the context of HIV/AIDS. Every woman who is HIV positive should know the facts, be well educated and be able to make an informed choice of feeding for her baby.
Considering the advantages of breastfeeding and the fact that only about 22.5% of mothers in Cameroon breastfeed exclusively during the first six months of birth, this among other strategies are implemented by the Cameroon Ministry of Public Health to improve on infant and young child feeding, so as to mitigate malnutrition and therefore reduce infant mortality. At the end of the workshop, Yvonne and her colleagues drew up a feasible project for a period of six months, and this was used to evaluate the participating organization’s level of understanding the subject. This was yet another opportunity for Yvonne to apply her knowledge of project planning and management. She was able to come up with a short doable project from January to August 2009. Within this project, the two persons who represented Cameroon Link could also train other members of staff attached to the six Women Gender and AIDS Councils (COGESID) mentioned in her first report. As at the moment of writing this report the newly trained infant and young child feeding counsellors had started social mobilisation and sensitization activities within the communities and on the media on the importance of breastfeeding.
Upon their return from the seminar they immediately got into activities and celebration marking the 20th edition of the World AIDS Day. Yvonne and others attended the ceremony launched by the Governor of the Littoral region of Cameroon and they were involved in the organization of educative talks in secondary schools. The activities were focused on the animation of college health clubs. Other Health NGOs and women’s groups were also involved in these activities. During this celebration, the regional coordinator of the National AIDS Control Committee presented the most recent statistics on the situation of HIV/AIDS in Cameroon.
Yvonne seized the opportunity to interview the coordinators of health clubs and students in the littoral region about the activities within their respective schools. This constituted vital information for her thesis since she was researching on HIV/AIDS prevention and education in secondary schools. It was observed that all secondary schools are involved in AIDS Communication. AIDS communication embodies advocacy, behaviour change, social mobilization and social change. This strategy addresses issues that immediately impact on HIV and AIDS, the lack of knowledge on the practice of safer sex, and the driving causes of the epidemic, such as gender relations hindering safer sex practice.
A key factor in effective AIDS communication is the understanding of audiences’ needs and circumstances. It is even made easier by the training of peer educators with whom the youths and other sub populations can identify. It was very amazing that most schools pay attention to the importance of the social context of communication, including religious, economic and cultural factors. These factors determine the nature of AIDS communication in and out of schools and within communities. Consequently, practitioners are increasingly focusing on the creation of enabling AIDS communication environments through work with institutions such as the media and civil society organizations. Cameroon link was an ordinary participant during the event because Yvonne and others had just returned from a training workshop in the Capital City of Yaoundé ahead of World AIDS Day and the memory was still very fresh on Mother to Child HIV Prevention. They did not participate in demonstrations but planned some counselling and educative campaigns with women groups during the week that preceded the World AIDS Day as part of the National AIDS Week declared by the Minister of Public Health. She also conducted interviews with the Littoral Regional Coordinator for AIDS Control Committee. The World AIDS Day activities were very significant to her because she was able to get recent statistics on the situation in Cameroon and other issues concerning prevention, care and support for people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) and the rehabilitation of HIV orphans.. This would have been a bit difficult during ordinary times because getting information in Cameroon is quite complex. Officials are usually very reluctant to give statistics and other vital information on their work.
LOCATION OF RESEARCH SITES
The first phase of the research study was carried out in Douala in the Littoral region, while the second phase in November 2008 was in Yaoundé, the capital city of Cameroon situated in the centre region. The choice was based on the resources available to Yvonne Bekeny. This means that the choice of research site was based strictly for convenience reasons, especially as other schools running the new HIV education programme are situated in the far south and distant northern regions. Yaoundé’s location makes access a lot easier as it is situated at the centre of Cameroon and it is the administrative capital of the nation. Considering the bilingual nature of Cameroon, Yaoundé has many public and private bilingual secondary schools. The choice of Government Bilingual High School Yaoundé and Government Bilingual Practicing High School Yaoundé was based on the similarities in characteristics of both schools. Similarities in terms of enrolled students. These are very thickly populated government education institution. Most of the students attending these colleges live in the out skirts of Yaounde City. Since one of the secondary schools undertook the new HIV/AIDS education programme and the other did not, this formed the basis of Yvonne Bekeny’s comparison.
RESEARCH APPROACH
To achieve the objectives of the study, a quantitative research approach was employed. This was important because it provided statistical data on the actual number of students involved in the research survey, their basic characteristics, level of education, gender differentiation, and religious inclinations among other variables. Secondary data from the National AIDS Control Committee was also consulted, to know the actual national statistics and to find answers to some of the research questions.
COLLEGE SELECTION
The choice of the colleges for the research survey was based on the following criteria:
1. Geographical location of colleges putting into consideration proximity and access to all.
2. Similarity in characteristics of both collegs. Both are bilingual educational institutions with English and French speaking students undertaking English and French systems of education respectively. They are similar also in terms of enrolment of large number of students each year.
3. Most of the students live at the heart of the city, while a few live in the out-skirts and neighbourhoods of Yaoundé..
4. One school does the new HIV/AIDS education programme and the other does not. This constituted the basis for a comparative analysis.
Due to the researcher’s English speaking background, only the English speaking students in each school where involved for the survey and research study.
SURVEY SAMPLING
The study utilized a random sampling frame. The two schools formed appropriate basis for comparison as the age group required for the study where easily identified. The main guiding criteria for choice were:
1. The age of the students. The age was considered as a major criterion for sampling and this lead to the next level of sampling.
2. The class of the students strictly followed the age. It was realized that the classes had different age ranges. But then, each level for example like form 3 classes had the same age range between 14-16 years. It is for this reason that random sampling of classes was done for each level. This gave the students equal chances to be drawn from the population.
The two colleges have different populations. GBHS Yaoundé has a total population of 6000 with 3000 English speaking students and 3000 French speaking students. The sample size for this school was 320 (10.6 percent) and it consisted of students with ages between 12-21 years. While GBPHS Yaoundé had a total population of 4800 students with 2300 English speaking students and 2500 French speaking students. The sample size in this school was 322 (12.8 percent). The sample also consisted of students with ages between 12 -21 years. The research expected to have a larger sample, but due to resource constraints on the part of the researcher, only the above sample could be considered. The sample strictly took into account the age, sex and gender of the respondents.
DATA COLLECTION METHODOLOGY
The research used two methods to collect the relevant data to measure the students’ knowledge, attitudes and reported behaviour on HIV/AIDS and to see the impact of the new HIV/AIDS education programme on the students. Secondary data was used to review the relevant literature on HIV/AIDS related issues within schools in Cameroon and within the youth population in general. Primary data was used for the most part and the instrument used was a questionnaire.
Some 642 questionnaires were administered to students in English. The questionnaire took into account the target age group for the study. From the college environment, Yvonne Bekeny returned to Cameroon, where she was initiated on information, education and communication strategies, networking and report writing.
Information, Education and Communication
A press conference was organized at the headquarters of Cameroon Link in the third week of December 2008 to highlight advocacy strategies by NGOs using the Sickle Cell Society UK approach. The conference speaker was the Director of Sickle Cell Society UK, Dr. Asaah Nkohkwo, who paired the relationship of sickle cell disorder and other diseases and how they affect African and Asian communities most.
Yvonne Bekeny was involved in the organisation of the conference logistics and report writing. The use of media for advocacy was also an aspect valorised by her participation in a live programme presentation at the Catholic Community Radio Station « Radio Véritas ». The live show was on highlights of the 5th Anniversary celebrations of the radio station. Yvonne and James were invited as guests speakers to the programme audience on what they considered to be the truth and how it is employed within the Cameroon communities and elsewhere. The live show was recorded and rebroadcast twice on the same channel at different peak listening hours.
Networking Linkages
Yvonne Bekeny had the opportunity to learn from Cameroon Link the importance of networking at national and international levels. Cameroon Link leads the Federation of Cameroon Breastfeeding Promotion Associations, FECABPA, and is also affiliated to two international health networks, while acting as focal point for the networks in Cameroon.
Cameroon Link is affiliated to the International Baby Food Action Network, (IBFAN) Africa, and the World Alliance for Breastfeeding Action, (WABA). In the latest development, the Executive Director of Cameroon Link was appointed to the position of International Coordinator of WABA’s Men Initiative, which calls for the mainstreaming of gender promotion within infant and young child feeding promotion and the encouragemen of youths to get involved in health development issues.
Yvonne Bekeny ended her field research studies at Cameroon Link with designing of a project for the initiation of fundraising in Finland to support the execution of humanitarian activities planned within the next four years. This aspect is found to be vital for the survival of any organisation, especially as all projects aim at durability of impact social change and behaviour change communication, BCC. This is how Yvonne Bekeny was given the opportunity to test all her skills. A project for Sickle Cell Awareness in Cameroon was designed as a team for fundraising lobby by her in Finland.
The strategies of Cameroon Link transferred to Yvonne will serve her at any time when she would have completed her studies in development and international cooperation..
Conclusion
Cameroon Link was very appreciative of the devotion, interest and willingness to cooperate with all staff of the organisation and to serve as a volunteer. There is no doubt that the internship of Yvonne Bekeny at Cameroon Link valorizes her as an excellent international development and cooperation agent in the making, considering the high level skills she achieved before returning to Finland..

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Reproductive Health, Mother & Child Care


Reproductive Health,Mother & Child Care
OPERATIONAL RESEARCH AND HIV/AIDS
By James Achanyi-Fontem
Cameroon Link
Nearly four decades after the emergence of the HIV/AIDS pandemic, biomedical, and epidemiological research has identified and described in great detail the nature of HIV infection and its modes of transmission.
These findings have been used by scientific experts to develop effective drug treatments, targeted behaviour change strategies, and sensitive surveillance and modelling tools.
Yet far less research has been devoted to basic operational issues that affect the delivery of services in prevention, care, and support.
We have learned much about which behaviours place persons at risk and have some sense of what types of interventions work to prevent HIV transmission, but we know far less about why and how these interventions work, what they cost, and where and when they can be successfully replicated on a large scale.
These questions are especially important in Cameroon in general and the Littoral or the south west provinces in particular, which are our main target populations, where more than 90 percent of HIV infected people live, because prevention, care, and support interventions remain the primary tools for dealing with the pandemic.
To successfully design and implement effective HIV/AIDS prevention and mitigation activities, we suggest that the program managers and policy makers urgently need accurate and timely information on the operational mechanisms that make these programs work in an era of scarce resources.
It is also critically important that decision makers be guided by the best and most current research evidence to determine which elements of policy and service programs are the most cost-effective in reducing new HIV infections and mitigating the effects of AIDS.
BREAKING NEW GROUND
As we apply for the frame work agreement for collaboration with the ministry of public health and international institutions in Cameroon, we would be reinforcing our strategies in the next five years (2009/2014) with focus on operational mechanisms of implementing policies and programs.
In addition to previous objectives, the focus will include:
- Identifying cutting-edge issues affecting the design and delivery of STI/HIV/AIDS programs.
- Test new approaches to prevention, care, and support programs through practical, field-based research.
- Disseminate the findings from the research.
- Recommend best practices to improve policies and programs.
Since the inception in 1992, the Cameroon Link (Human Assistance Programme) has worked with a bread group of local, regional, and international organisations to identify the key constraints to service delivery and to test viable alternatives to programs with limited effectiveness.
Focusing on some broad topic areas, Cameroon Link HAP is one of the first STI/HIV/AIDS projects in Cameroon to use operational research to identify program problems and test new solutions to overcoming these problems.
The operational research process has been employed extensively by Cameroon Link in collaboration with the Ministry of Public Health, IBFAN Africa, WABA, FECABPA, German Technical Co-operation, GTZ, Care International and the Cameroon Association of Newspaper Journalists, CANJ, over the last ten years in reproductive health service delivery.
It has proven extremely effective in improving the quality and effectiveness of service delivery programs in large part because it has applied research that places a premium on involving key stakeholders in the entire process.
These stakeholders are many and include government ministries, local NGOs, Local community leaders, people living with STI/HIV/AIDS, research agencies, and international organisations, amongst others.
Multi-stepped Approach
Cameroon Link operations will in the next five years involve five basic steps:
- Problem identification and diagnosis.
- Strategy selection.
- Strategy experimentation and evaluation.
- Information dissemination.
- Results utilisation.
From past experiences, we have noted that this process increase the efficiency, efficacy, quality and cost-effectiveness of prevention and care services, and changes individual behaviour by making services more accessible and acceptable.
The Cameroon Link Human Assistance Project concentrates on working with local service delivery organisations and groups to design and implement three basic types of field-based studies.
EXPLORATORY STUDIES
These studies are needed whenever there is a perceived problem, but the nature and extent of the problem are not known. Such studies can identify individual behaviours, and the legal, cultural, and socio-economic factors that influence risk and vulnerability, as well as the parameters of a service delivery.
FIELD INTERVENTION STUDIES
This study is useful when the factors responsible for a problem situation is or are known (i.e., lack of finances, lack of training, inadequate involvement of local NGOs, lack of collaboration of target groups, high prevalence of risk behaviours).
The most efficient and cost-effective means of prevention have yet to be determined. Field intervention studies test new approaches to behaviour change and new modes of configuring and delivering prevention and care services.
EVALUATION STUDIES
Often the problem situation is known from earlier diagnostic studies and a range of possible solutions have been identified from earlier field intervention studies, but the effect and sustainability of implementing these solutions in the larger community, beyond the confines of a tightly controlled intervention study are not known.
Evaluative studies are a valuable approach for examining the out come or impart of interventions that are implemented through out a service delivery environment.
Regardless of the type of study, the goal is always to improve the way in which policies are designed and implemented. This goal can only be met if each activity is accompanied by a strong information dissemination and results utilisation program.
This explains the connection of the Cameroon Association of Newspaper Journalists, AJPEC, partnership in the Human Assistance Programme and the raison d’être of the revival of the Cameroon Link newspaper for the presentation of NGOs activities through the forum columns. Articles, feedback and suggestions or information will be welcome.
STI INTERVENTIONS
PUTTING NEW PREVENTION AND TREATMENT APPROACHES TO THE TEST AS PROJECT
One of the most important prevention discoveries made about HIV is that the presence of other sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) greatly increases vulnerability to and transmission of the virus.
This has been a key factor in HIV’s virulent spread in Cameroon, where untreated STDs are also endemic. Thus, strengthening STD prevention and management and, wherever possible, incorporating these efforts into HIV prevention programs have become a key global strategy for curbing the virus that causes AIDS.
But this is not a simple matter. The stigmatisation of those with STDs, a very common problem, inhibits people from seeking treatment.
Designing effective behaviour change campaigns that address sexual behaviour is often difficult, especially if literacy is low. Several constraints on national health budgets restrict the implementation of STD prevention and treatment programs, just as poverty limits the ability of individuals to pay for their own treatment.
Access to care is also limited, particularly in rural areas isolated by weak infrastructure. Even in urban towns with more resources, STD prevention and control programs are often insufficiently funded.
Despite the growing wealth of knowledge about STDs, few large-scale prevention and treatment programs have evolved in the districts where the need is greatest.
One of the biggest challenges is how to translate important research finding into effective, affordable and real programs that can be adapted to very different settings.
A key lesson learnt from past experiences is that like the HIV and STD epidemics themselves, real solutions are complex and multi-faceted.
STI PREVENTION STRATEGIES
PERIODIC PRESUMPTION TREATMENT
This is mass treatment of individuals presumed to be infected with one or more STDs, without attempting to make an individual diagnosis. This strategy can be targeted to persons with known high-risk behaviours like sex workers or free girls.
SYNDROMIC MANAGEMENT
Treating a patient for all likely causes of a symptom or sign of STD, rather than on the basis of a specific diagnosis.
PEER EDUCATION
Training individuals in health education and counselling techniques so that they can educate others in their peer groups.
POLICY OF 100% USE IN SEX ESTABLISHMENT OF CONDOMS
An intervention that seeks to reduce transmission of HIV and other STDs to and by sex workers by ensuring that condoms are used for every act of intercourse.
I.E.C PROJECT OBJECTIVES
LONG TERM
The training of staff and production of information material and publication will enhance a greater awareness of the local communities and contribute to the process of community development by mobilising the local communities towards involvement in the prevention of STD/HIV/AIDS/TB and social welfare. Media organisations must be regularly implicated in I.E.C programs.
CONCLUSION
To back up this executive summary, please click the profile of Cameron Link, its projects plan of action from 2009 to 2012 to get highlights of major health initiatives.

HIV AND INFANT FEEDING


HIV AND INFANT FEEDING
By James Achanyi-Fontem
Cameroon Link
HIV was first detected in breastmilk in the mid-1980s, creating problems as to how to advise HIV-infected mothers on the feeding of their infants. The risk of transmitting HIV through breastfeeding must be balanced against the risks that can result from not breastfeeding.
Breastfeeding is near universal in Cameroon, making it hard to conduct studies on the risks of artificial feeding. The lack of data makes it difficult to balance these risks. As at now, HIV prevalence is high and rising in pregnant women in Cameroon, so it is important that guidance should be developed to help reduce the risk of mother-to-child transmission (MCTC). It must be borne in mind that breastfeeding in Cameroon is recommended usually from birth and may continue in most cases to over 24 months, but also that complementary foods are often introduced within the first 3 months of life.
In the resource poor settings, the many benefits of breastfeeding become especially important and the risks associated with the alternatives to breastfeeding also become greater. In developing countries like Cameroon, the high cost and irregular supply of breast milk substitutes, and the lack of safe water to make up such foods, results in higher levels of morbidity and mortality for infants who are not breastfed.
Studies carried in Cameroon by Cameroon Link have found that babies who are not breastfed in the first month of life are six times more likely to die than breastfed babies. The protective effect of breastfeeding declines with age but remains significant for the first 8 months of infancy, and it is greatest among mothers with limited education.
In the district hospitals in Cameroon today, for an HIV-infected mother, the decision whether to break with tradition and not breastfeed, or to run the risk of transmitting the virus through breastfeeding, imposes a heavy burden. A woman who does not breastfeed may be stigmatised and others will suspect she has HIV, and there could be many adverse social consequences.
A woman may try to hide her HIV status by breastfeeding but also use artificial feeding in an attempt to reduce the risks to the baby. This , however, exposes her baby to both sets of risks. For now , options for replacement of infant feeds to HIV-positive mothers and children for the first six months are discussed by the UN agencies like UNICEF,WHO, and WHA.
On the other hand, there is information on home-prepared foods for children over this age. These guide are generic and should be locally adapted. Through counselling, they should also be tailored to individual circumstances . Local guidelines are being developed in Cameroon, but little is known about their implementation or effectiveness. What is known is that it is difficult to achieve safe replacement feeding in Cameroon for now.
HIV transmission through breastfeeding
The mechanisms of HIV transmission through breastfeeding are not clear but the virus probably infects the infant through breaches in the integrity of the intestinal mucosa. An improved understanding of how HIV transmission through breastfeeding occurs might make it possible to reduce the transmission risk.
Data suggest that 10 – 20 % of babies born to HIV-positive mothers will become infected through breastfeeding when it continues beyond one year. Several factors associated with increased risk of breastfeeding transmission have been identified. Those for which there is strong evidence of increased risk include:
* high maternal HIV load (found in recent infection and in advanced disease)
• clinical symptoms of advanced disease
• immune deficiency (low CD4 and high CD8 counts)
• duration of breastfeeding
•breastfeeding whilst experiencing mastitis, abscesses, or ripple fissures.
Exclusive Breastfeeding
Exclusive breastfeeding defined as breastfeeding without any supplementary food or liquid, is generally recommended for the first 6 months of life. It reduces mortality from diarrhoea and respiratory infections and protects against other diseases. Infants who are breastfed exclusively for at least 3 months have significantly lower HIV transmission at 3 and 6 months compared with infants who received breast milk plus other feeds (“mixed feeding”) within the first 3 months of life.
The rate of transmission in exclusively breastfed infants and infants who were never breastfed were similar , 19,4 % at 6 months. In contrast, 26,1 % of infants who were mixed fed are HIV-positive at this age. At 15 months, 24,7% of babies exclusively breastfed for at least 3 months are HIV-infected , compared with 35,9% of the babies who are mixed fed in the early months of life.
Mastitis
Mastitis is a condition resulting from inadequate or poor drainage of milk from the breast. It may be either infectious or non-infectious in origin. Mastitis affects up to a third of breastfeeding women, usually in the first 3 months after delivery. Some vitamin deficiencies may increase the risk of mastitis.
Mastitis can be treated with low-cost antibiotics. Counselling women about good breastfeeding techniques can help them avoid problems that would cause elevated milk sodium, poor milk drainage and inflammation leading to mastitis, as well as nipple problems which may also increase the risk of HIV transmission.
Antiretroviral drug trials for prevention of MTCT
Short-course , prophylactic Antiretroviral drugs (ARV) are the most effective way to reduce MTCT during pregnancy, labour and delivery, and through breastfeeding during the first days of infant life.
It must also be recognised that ARV protocols require the identification of HIV-positive women through voluntary counselling and testing (VCT) services, which need to be expanded in Cameroon.
Recommendations for making breastfeeding safer in the context of HIV
Mothers have a right to information and support so that they can feed their babies safely. They must know their HIV status and they must understand the consequences of each feeding option.
Most of the options for reducing MTCT discussed in this supplement so far only apply to those women who know their HIV status. In Cameroon, however, the vast majority of HIV-infected mothers are unaware of this.
The UN policy is that breastfeeding should be promotes and supported among women who are HIV-negative and those who do not know their HIV status. The following recommendations are therefore made.
• Breastfeeding should begin within 30 minutes of birth
• Breastfeeding skills (proper position and attachment, how to feed the baby ) comfortably) should be established immediately.
• Infants should be fed frequently, ‘on demand’.
• Breastfeeding should be exclusive ( no other solids or liquids) for about the first six months.
• Age-appropriate complementary foods should be introduced at 6 months;
• Women at risk of HIV should take steps to avoid infection during the breastfeeding period. (Risk of MTCT is greater immediately after infection because of elevated levels of the virus in the blood).
• Mothers should seek immediate treatment for breast inflammation, cracked nipples or infant mouth sores.
• If such problems occur in one breast only, mothers should express and discard milk from that breast.
These “safer” breastfeeding practices are important for public health programs because they may reduce transmission risks when mothers are:
• unaware of their HIV-status
• HIV-negative but at risk of infection
• HIV-positive but have decided to breastfeed.

HIV/AIDS AND NUTRITION


HIV/AIDS AND NUTRITION
By James Achanyi-Fontem,
Cameroon Link

HIV infection not only compromises the nutritional status of infected individuals, but poor nutritional status can affect the progression of the infection. Research to identify nutritional interventions has been undertaken in Africa by the Commonwealth Regional Health Community Secretariat in Africa seeking to:
• review what is known about the clinical and social dimensions of HIV and nutrition
• synthesise current understanding of the role of macro and micro nutrients in HIV
• describe the impact of HIV on nutritional status and the impact of nutritional status on HIV progression and transmission particularly mother-to-child transmission (MCTC)
• highlight important research from Africa
• identify gaps in research and make recommendations.
Epidemiology and social impact
Although the number of infected people is increasing in Cameroon, HIV/AIDS affects a disproportionate number of young women and large number of children. Declining life expectancy and changing population structure are harming economic and social development, including food security, illness and death from AIDS cab profoundly affect a family’s ability to provide adequate food and nutrition for its members, particularly for young children who are already vulnerable.
An estimated 12 million children in Africa have lost one parent or both before the age of 15. This highly vulnerable group is expected to grow dramatically.
Paediatric HIV/AIDS
Infants can acquire HIV from their mothers during pregnancy, at the time of delivery , or during breastfeeding. If no interventions are in place to prevent mother-to-child transmission, about 5 – 10% of infants will be infected during pregnancy, about 10 – 20 % will become infected during delivery; and another 10 – 20% will become infected fi breastfed to one year or longer.
In these cases, children are more likely to suffer from failure to thrive and low weight-for-age than uninfected children. Disease progression may be more rapid than among children in industrialised countries because of endemic malnutrition, frequent exposure to infectious diseases, and limited access to health care and treatments.
According to the WHO recent clinical approach to diagnosing HIV in children living where testing is not available, the following guidelines suggest that, where three out of seven conditions are present, HIV infection should be suspected. These are the seven conditions:
* two or more chest infections requiring antibiotics (pneumonia) in the past two months
• one or more episodes of persistent diarrhoea or two or more episodes of acute diarrhoea in the past two months
• a patient with tuberculosis
• oral candidacies (thrush)
• enlarged lymph nodes in tow or more sites
• growth faltering (weight curve flat or falling for two consecutive months)
• weight-for-age below the 3rd percentile, using international growth reference standards.
Malnutrition
Malnutrition in its many forms is endemic and measurements of body size indicate protein-energy malnutrition, but micro nutrient malnutrition in its milder forms is not easily recognised. The most commonly reported micro nutrient deficiencies are iron, vitamin A, and iodine.
Deficiencies in other vitamins and minerals are not commonly reported , but occur frequently where diets are lacking in variety and contain few animal products. Malnutrition in children is increasing due to HIV/AIDS and other factors that affect food security , access to health care, and family caring practices. Vitamin A deficiency is widespread, and about 60% of African children under five years , and half of all pregnant women , suffer from anaemia.
The clinical context
Nutritional status affects the progression of HIV disease . Infectious diseases, no matter how mild, influence nutritional status. Conversely nutritional deficiency, if sufficiently severe, will impair resistance to infection.
Infants and young children are frequently malnourished, so the differentiation of HIV malnutrition from other causes is difficult. HIV not only destroys the CD4 cells of the immune system, but also affects the cells of the intestine, brain and other organs.
Infections lead to reduced dietary intake and nutrient absorption, whilst increasing utilisation and excretion of proteins and micro nutrients. The immune system responds to infection by releasing pro-oxidant cytokines, which demand increase demand for and utilisation of anti-oxidant vitamins and minerals.
Oxidative stress occurs when there are not enough antioxidants to form enzymes needed to respond to the pro-oxidant immune response. Oxidative stress may hasten HIV replication and increase production of hormones involved in the metabolism of carbohydrates, proteins and fats, contributing to further weight loss.
Social Context
Quality of life is seriously affected by HIV infection. Weight loss leads to fatigue and decreasing physical activity. Entire families are affected when infected adults cannot work steadily and provide for their dependants, but face increased expense when infected members require medication and continued care.
A common result is food security, which is especially severe in female-headed households and in areas where farming is a primary occupation. Parental death is a frequent precipitating cause of childhood malnutrition.
Weight loss and wasting in HIV/AIDS
The syndrome once known as ‘slim disease’ typically found in AIDS patients is a severe nutritional manifestation of the disease. In earlier stages of HIV infection, weight loss typically follows one of two patterns: slow and progressive weight loss from anorexia and gastrointestinal disturbances, and rapid episodic weight loss from acute infection.
Three, sometimes overlapping processes cause weight loss and wasting.
1. Reduction in food intake due to physical or psychological factors affecting food availability and nutritional quality, and the side-effects of drugs.
2. Nutrient malabsorption due to frequent diarrhoea and possible damage to intestinal cells by the virus. Fat malabsorption also affects the absorption and utilisation of fat-soluble vitamins (A,E), further compromising nutritional and immune status).
3. Metabolic alterations is also a serious problem. Infection results in increased energy and protein requirements. Furthermore , severe reduction of food intake can cause changes in metabolism, as the body uses up carbohydrate reserves and begins to break down protein to produce glucose, causing muscle – wasting cachexia. This process occurs when skeletal muscle is broken down for proteins required to bind and clear infectious agents.
Malnutrition due to the first two processes may be reduced by treating the immediate source of the problem (other infections) and providing well-tolerated foods to the infected individual, whilst increasing food intake during convalescence.
Weight loss and wasting due to metabolic changes cannot be reversed by feeding alone. Industrialised countries have used expensive appetite stimulants and hormones to treat wasting in AIDS patients. However, a less expensive supplement on weight again appeals to depend upon the stage of the disease. Nutrition supplementation combined with glutamate and antioxidants appears to be effective over a 3-month period .
Other nutritional supplements tested, such as fish oil supplements and high energy-protein drinks, have resulted in improved weight again among some HIV-infected adults. The impact of these supplements on weight again appears to depend upon the stage of the disease. Nutrition supplementation combined with counselling about appropriate diet has had the greatest impact before the onset of chronic secondary infections. Unfortunately, relatively few people in Cameroon learn of their status early in the disease, in time to take preventive actions.
Vitamins and Minerals in HIV/AIDS
The table below summarises the role of vitamins and minerals in supporting body functions and the immune system. HIV – infected individuals have decreased absorption, excessive urinary loss, and low blood concentrations of several nutrients.
It is not known if these deficiencies are independent markers of disease progression or whether they are causally related to the worsening symptoms of HIV/AIDS. But low intakes and pre-existing malnutrition are likely to worsen the impact of HIV on immune function.
Metabolic alterations that accompany acute infections
Protein
Increased urinary nitrogen loss
Increased protein turnover
Decreased skeletal muscle protein synthesis
Increased skeletal muscle breakdown
Increased hepatic protein synthesis
Lipid (Fat)
Hypertriglyceridemia
Increased hepatic de novo fatty acid synthesis
Increased hepatic triglyceride esterification
Increased very low-density lipoprotein production
Decreased peripheral lipoprotein lipase activity
Increased adiposity triglyceride lipase
Carbohydrate
Hyperglycaemia
Insulin resistance
Increased peripheral glucose utilisation
Increased gluconeogenesis
These are causally related to the worsening symptoms of HIV/AIDS; But low intakes and pre-existing malnutrition are likely to worsen the impact of HIV on immune function.
Micro nutrient deficiencies:
• vary across populations and according to disease stage
• are associated with accelerated progression of the disease
• are predictive of HIV-associated mortality.
Micro nutrient supplementation has thus the potential to be an affordable public health measure.
Selenium deficiency is unusual in most populations of Cameroon. Deficiency impairs the immune system and has been associated with faster HIV progression. Selenium is believed to play an important role in reducing oxidative stress and animal studies suggested that lack of it increases viral pathogenicity.
Micronutrients and Mother-to-Child- transmission (MCTC) of HIV
High viral load due to recent or advanced infection increases the likelihood that HIV will pass on to the baby during pregnancy, delivery, or breastfeeding. If malnutrition –facilitated immune suppression contributes to high viral load, then the risk of MCTC is greater. Some micronutrient deficiencies during pregnancy (vitamin A and zinc) result in reduced foetal nutrient stores, which may affect their immune status and subsequently increase their vulnerability to HIV.
In addition, malnutrition during pregnancy may further erode the woman’s immune status and possibly accelerate disease progression. According to studies carried out, breastfeeding mothers with HIV lost more weight and died earlier than those also HIV infected who did not breastfeed.
Interpreting the results
What is known to favour the continuous increase in the HIV figures in Africa than in the industrialised countries could be related to the following views:
• The general level of nutrition is higher in industrialised countries than in Africa. Nutritional interventions may therefore have a greater impact in Africa.
• Most studies of adults in industrialised countries have been among homosexual men and /or drug users. Their diet and health status are likely to be quite different from HIV – infected adults in Africa.
• Most Americans and Europeans are taking anti-retroviral drugs and treatment for secondary infections, including nutritionally fortified foods and supplements. These are not generally available or consumed by Africans. Nutritional interventions have had a positive impact in populations also receiving antiretroviral drugs.
HIV+ and Nutrition Support
Nutrition programmes serving people with HIV/AIDS have significantly increased their quality of life. Programmes addressing the needs of people living with HIV and AIDS can have varied objectives. These objectives will depend on the needs of the population and the stage of HIV disease in individual participants.
For people with HIV but no opportunistic or secondary infections, programmes should focus on building nutrition stores to prevent nutrition deterioration. People with AIDS, at the other end of the spectrum, will require palliative nutrition care.
Specific objectives for nutritional care and support programmes may include:
• improving nutrition, diet and eating habits
• building or replenishing body stores of Micronutrients
• preventing weight loss
• preserving muscle mass
• preventing food borne illness
• preparing for and managing AIDS related symptoms that affect food consumption
• ensuring that nutritious food is available to AIDS-affected families
Nutritional support should be provided within the context of holistic care and people with HIV/AIDS should be allowed to participate in providing programme services .
Components of a holistic care programme include counselling for emotional and psychological stress, physical exercise , health care and treatment of opportunistic infections. Nutritional programmes may include one or more of the following :
• education regarding diet
• safe water , personal hygiene , and food safety
• support for healthy members of family affected by HIV/AIDS
• nutrition supplements , group meals, or food baskets
• home-delivered ready-to-eat foods for AIDS patients
Recommendations for nutrition care
Recommendations vary according to the nutritional status, stage of infection, and level of disease. In the asymptomatic stage, advice will focus on maintaining health and building nutrition stores in the body.
In later stages, advice may shift to address the problems of anorexia, infections causing protein catabolism, and to mitigate the adverse nutritional effects of chronic diarrhoea and other secondary infections.
Nutritional support is more likely to be effective during the early stages of the disease, but this requires early diagnosis and early detection of the disease is rare in Cameroon.
For HIV-positive asymptomatic individuals, a healthy diet that is adequate i terms of energy, protein, fat, and other essential nutrients should be promoted as a key component for positive living, and to prolong the period between HIV infection and the onset of secondary infections attributed to AIDS. Local available foods should be recommended and these should be familiar to all health care providers, and made accessible , along with sources of social support , to families affected by HIV/AIDS.
Nutritional counselling should include information on appropriate diets, taking into account the individual’s particular preferences and needs in terms of age, sex, and physiological state- for example, pregnancy, lactation, engaged in strenuous physical labour and so on.
Even those who are asymptomatic have increased metabolism due to the HIV infection. The potential for increasing nutritional reserves and improving dietary intake are greater when an individual is still relatively healthy. Therefore , programmes should emphasise building nutritional reserves at an early stage.
People with HIV/AIDS should be encouraged to maintain physical activity. Weight –bearing exercise may help build lean body mass. Exercise also stimulates appetite. Counselling should also include discussion on personal hygiene, safety in food preparation and cooking, and emphasise the importance of seeking immediate attention for digestive or other health related problems. Preventing food and water borne infections is especially important in people with compromised immune systems.
HIV-positive individuals experiencing weight loss
Most early weight loss is the result of depressed appetite during secondary infections, particularly diarrhoea. Nutrition advice for managing common conditions and maintaining intake by having more frequent meals, and well liked foods, suggests that intake should be increased during periods of recovery from infection.
All people with HIV/AIDS at whatever stage should be advised against unhealthy lifestyles that include alcohol consumption, tobacco and drug use, and unsafe sexual practices, which increase the risk of infections. They should be advised to have all infections treated immediately and completely, to maintain personal hygiene, and to prevent food contamination at all times.
Recommendations for nutritional support for people with AIDS
The advice is similar except that the emphasis shifts from preventing to mitigating th nutritional consequences of the disease and preserving functional independence wherever possible. Preservation of lean body mass is important.
Protein-energy consumption should be maintained and medical recommendation should be followed for specific symptoms. Foods low in insoluble fibre and fat should be avoided to minimise gastro-intestinal discomfort and, during periods of nausea and vomiting, people should be encouraged to eat small snacks.
Fluid intake should be maintained at all times , especially during periods of diarrhoea. Specific eating times should be set and made pleasant and supportive. It should be noted that several medications against opportunistic infections have nutritional consequences or side effects such as nausea and vomiting.
In situation of food insecurity, programmes providing food supplements should insure that rations are of sufficient size to meet the needs of the HIV/AIDS patient and his /her dependants. All family members are extremely vulnerable in this situation.
Nutrition Care for children with HIV/AIDS
Children with mothers who are HIV-positive are especially vulnerable, as a result of their own infection with HIV or because of the deteriorating health of one or both parents. In this case, recommendations should follow those for all young children but take into account the increased nutritional requirements that accompany the infection.
Children less than 2 years need to be fed patiently and persistently with supervision and love, especially as they are likely to be frequently ill. Solid foods can be introduced gradually in small portions at least three times a day, and by the time they are one year old most children can eat adult diet as long as food is cut or mashed and not too spicy.
Variety and foods containing essential vitamins are a priority – locally available fruits and vegetables, and animal products and fortified food if available. Nutritious snacks between meals can be provided to increase consumption.
The following guidelines are suggested for nutritional management of HIV infected children :
• regular monitoring of weight, growth, and development
• review of child’s diet at every health visit
• immunisation and prophylactic vitamin A supplements
• prompt treatment of any secondary infection and maintenance of food and fluid intake
• for those who are severely malnourished , local guidelines should be followed and entered or parenteral nutrition should be considered if available.