Transcript Document

Men’s underrepresentation in
HIV services: bad for men,
women and health systems
Dean Peacock, Sonke Gender
Justice Network, July 2012
Overview and key messages
•
Men chronically underrepresented in HIV and AIDS testing and
treatment services—in Southern Africa and globally.
•
This is bad for men AND for women—and it places expensive and
unnecessary burdens on women and on health systems.
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It’s in everyone’s interests for men to know their status, access
treatment and be healthy: it’s good for men AND women
•
New technologies like PrEP, microbicides, gel, and treatment as
prevention can only be effective if we get more men into HIV
services.
Men and HIV testing and treatment:
“Efforts to understand men’s health-seeking behaviour
are poorly understood in the AIDS epidemic, and
encouraging men to get tested and into treatment is a
major challenge, but one that is poorly recognised.
Addressing these issues effectively means moving beyond
laying blame, and starting to develop interventions to
encourage uptake of prevention, testing, and treatment
for men—for everyone’s sake. Expanding HIV care in
Africa: making men matter. The Lancet Vol 374 July 25,
2009, Edward J Mills, Nathan Ford, Peter Mugyenyi.
Men and HIV treatment:
Men and HIV Treatment in Southern Africa:
• Disproportionately fewer men than women are
accessing ART across Africa (Muula et al. 2007).
• Men are starting ART with more advanced HIV
disease (Cornell et al. 2009; Stringer et al. 2006).
• Men are more likely than women to die on ART
(Cornell et al. 2010; Taylor-Smith et al. 2010).
• Men more likely to interrupt treatment (Kranzer et
al. 2010)
• Men more likely to be lost to follow-up on ART
(Ochieng Ooko et al. 2010).
Men and HIV testing: South Africa HCT
Scale-up campaign data, June 2011
In the first 15 months of the HCT
campaign, 12, 961 million people were
tested
• 30% of testers have been adult
males
• 65% of testers have been adult
females
• 5% of testers have been children
Consequences of men’s low testing and treatment: higher
mortality levels for men.
Figure 2. Mortality patterns by age and sex between tested and
untested participants, 2005 (South Africa).
Consequences for women of men’s higher mortality due to
low testing and treatment.
• Women carry high burden of care in homes and health
facilities
• Women suffer economic hardship related to illness
and medication, burial and funeral, lost income
• Women grieve for lost loved ones and family members
Men’s low utilisation both a demand and
a supply issue
Lots of evidence that men’s attitudes about men and manhood limit
uptake of health services
Also lots of evidence from many studies that it reflects obstacles
created by service providers and health facilities.
Gender as relational: Integrating focus on gender
equality and on comprehensive access to HIV
services into SA NSP 2012-2016
The 2012-2016 SA NSP recognises that gender norms:
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‘discourage men from accessing HIV, STI and TB services,
contribute to violence against women, multiple partnerships
and ...encourage alcohol consumption’.
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In response it is proposed, ‘A comprehensive national social
and behavioural change communication (SBCC) strategy must
serve to increase demand and uptake of services, to promote
positive norms and behaviours and to challenge those that
place people at risk’
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Challenge the gender norms that influence ‘delaying sexual
debut; reducing multiple and concurrent sexual partnerships’.
‘These strategies must also address the gender norms that
equate alcohol consumption with masculinity’.
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Importantly, it is noted that the roll-out of MMC should
include gender sensitisation. (NSP, pp. 23, 39 & 41)
HIV testing in the SA NSP
• “Data from the 2010–2011 national HCT campaign indicates that
men represented only 30% of those who tested. Efforts must be
made to increase men’s health-seeking behaviour, including
participation in HCT”.
• “Testing and screening services must take place at multiple settings
to reach all populations, including homes (by trained community
health workers), workplaces, schools and tertiary institutions, social
grant distribution points, and correctional facilities. “
• HCT services must also be made available through mobile services
in communities: sporting events, taxi ranks and malls, correctional
facilities, mines, airports, malls, shebeens, hotels, schools, tertiary
institutions, sex work venues/locations and clubs.