Title: Universal Access
1Universal Access Children as the Missing Faces of
AIDS Asia-Pacific
2How many children are affected in Africa?
3How many children are affected in Asia?
?
Generalized
Source pg 199, 2004 Report on the Global AIDS,
UNAIDS
4Low-level
99 of the popula-tion in Asia are still HIV
negative. Lets just keep it that way. Peter
Piot to ADB President and staff in Manila, 22 Feb
2005
Low Prevalence
Low Prevalence East Asia Pacific
High Prevalence - Africa
Concentrated
High
Generalized
Source 2004 Report on the Global AIDS, UNAIDS
5Low-level
Low Prevalence
Low Prevalence
High prevalence Africa
Low Prevalence East Asia Pacific
Concentrated
High
Generalized
High
Generalized
Source 2004 Report on the Global AIDS, UNAIDS
6Low-level
India 0.9 5.1 million
Low Prevalence
Low Prevalence
High prevalence Africa
Low Prevalence East Asia Pacific
South Africa 21.5 4.8million
Concentrated
High
Generalized
High
Generalized
Source 2004 Report on the Global AIDS, UNAIDS
7(No Transcript)
8Estimated between Sub-Saharan Africa Asia
- HIV circulating within 3 major sub-populations
IDU, SW MSM - with pockets of generalized epi (ANC gt1)
- Recent trend ? clients of sex workers infected
- Increased of women - 23 (East Asia-Pacific),
26 (South Asia) - - 57 (Sub-Saharan Africa)
- Plus increased evidence of high risk of
infection during pregnancy
9International OVC framework
- Strengthen the capacity of families
- Small scale projects, not at national policy
stage except for Thailand Cambodia through
income-generation, drug, food and school
assistance - Mobilize community-based responses to support
affected families - Thailand Cambodia (National models) India
Papua New Guinea (NGO FBO) - Ensure equal access to essential services
- Thailand, most recently Health Thailand
30-Baht Scheme that also covers ARV (including
2nd line regimen) - Policy, legislation, standards and enforcement
- China 4 Frees 1 Care, Thailand, Cambodia
Vietnam (legal review) - Raise awareness to create supportive environment
(from angle of children affected) - Cambodia, China, Laos, Vietnam Thailand
10Knowledge, capacity, commitment leadership
- Defining the target pop. identifying
beneficiaries - PHIV prefers to remain anonymous, and children
affected are invisible - Stigma discrimination AIDS as Social Evil
- Approaches to programming
- Spectrum of care Info on families, foster care,
adoption, and alternative types of residential
care still not well examined (only Vietnam
conducted a study) - Integrating children affected by HIV/AIDS into
broader community initiatives (selected
countries Thailand Cambodia) - Linking activities for children with other
HIV/AIDS efforts (not much beyond PMTCT Prong
III) - Addressing fundamental needs food security
nutrition, education, economic stability
protection (Thailand Cambodia not much
elsewhere) - Prevention among the most vulnerable children
youth
Source Lynn Sussman, Providing Support to
Children Affected by HIV/AIDS their families
in Low Prevalence Countries of India and
Cambodia Programmeing Issues, Policy Project,
Washinton DC, Jan 2006
11(No Transcript)
12Coming to grip not only with children affected
but also those Infected
13Growing up alone ????
14Children affected by AIDS an emerging issue
- Regional estimation conducted in 2005 1.5
million in Asia-Pacific (10 of global total) - National data not systemically collected
largely derived from initial assessments - Estimation of orphans compounded by stigma
denial of deaths as related to AIDS - Lack of clarity on definitions of vulnerable
children spectrum of vulnerabilities - Conservative estimates favoured in some
instances due to budgetary implications
subsidies to affected families with children
15Children affected by AIDS an emerging issue
Source Various country assessments by MOPH,
UNICEF or UNCT
16Low Prevalence
Low Prevalence East Asia Pacific
High Prevalence - Africa
Concentrated
Generalized
High
17Diverse cultures, local practices governing
systems
18Diverse cultures, local practices governing
systems
Papua New Guina 800 languages
Tengatenga Care Centre for Children
Kartanim Care Centre
Kenan Care Centre
Peace Care Centre
19Universal Access
- Global campaign in the context of scaling up
- Asia-Pacific Universal Access Conference,
Pattaya, Thailand, 14 16 Feb - Review of National HIV/AIDS Strategic Plan are
children given sufficient policy attention
programme support? - East Asia-Pacific Regional Consultation on
Children and HIV/AIDS, Hanoi, Vietnam, 22 24
March
20Universal Access
- Estimated resource needs for HIV/AIDS
Asia-Pacific - 4 billion - 2006
- 5 billion 2007
- Eg. Thailand, 85 on treatment and care,
including ARV - Current annual spending, including both public
and private out-of-pocket expenditures, about
700 million - Region as a whole spends 100 billion a year on
health care alone. Three-quarters (75) of each
dollar spent on health care right now are private
payments to private providers - Long-term financing of care welfare support a
major issue - Competing priorities Recent threat of avian
pandemic human influenza
.
21Programmes coverage
Source Coverage of Selected Services for
HIV/AIDS Prevention, Care and Support in Low and
Middle-Income Countries in 2003, USAID, UNAIDS,
WHO, UNICEf and the Policy Project, June 2004
22Universal Access
- Key messages children affected by AIDS shared
with UNAIDS Sec-Gens Special Representative on
HIV/AIDS in Asia Nafis Sadik - National consultations taking place
- Indonesia Revised Presidential decree No.
30/1994 on HIV/AIDS prevention and care to
include children - Myanmar National Strategic Plan should address
children affected infected - Vietnam Multi-sectoral response for children
affected by AIDS (9 NAP currently place children
under Community Response) - Regional Consultation on Children and HIV/AIDS,
Hanoi, Vietnam, 22 24 March - First of its kind (regional) in Asia
- USAID/OGAC/FHI, WHO, UNESCO, Save the Children,
UNICEF/UNAIDS - Defining needs, emphasizing rights of
marginalized children, - International framework, coordination,
integration partnership - Hanoi Call to Action
23Hanoi Call to Action, 22 24 Mar 2006
- Develop country-specific targets and action plans
for rapidly scaling up HIV prevention, including
the prevention of maternal to child transmission,
HIV testing and counseling, pediatric and adult
antiretroviral treatment, family-oriented
clinical care, psychosocial support and child and
family protection services with accelerated
effort targeted specifically for children by
2010. - Allocate a dedicated proportion of national
HIV/AIDS budgets to the rapid scale up of
responses targeted for children. - A quantitative and qualitative assessment of the
situation of children and HIV/AIDS in each
country to strengthen and scale up the response. - Establish systems for monitoring key indicators
over time, including numbers of children infected
and affected by HIV/AIDS and the core global
indicators for monitoring the national response
to children orphaned and made vulnerable by
HIV/AIDS.
24Hanoi Call to Action, 22 24 Mar 2006
- 5. National multi-sectoral working group that
focuses on child welfare and coordinates the
scaled up response for children vulnerable to,
infected and affected by HIV/AIDS. - 6. Eliminate HIV/AIDS-related stigma and
discrimination, financial and other barriers to
ensure that all children have access to essential
services, including a continuous basic education.
- 7. Expanded efforts to ensure that all children
are provided with the most family-like care
environment and that institutional care is used
for children without caregivers only as a
temporary measure or option of last resort. - Over 200 government NGO representatives from
17 countries in East Asia Pacific
25Thank you Wing-Sie Cheng Regional Adviser,
HIV/AIDS UNICEF East Asia Pacific Regional
Office Bangkok, Thailand Email wscheng_at_unicef.org