“So far, only a few individual NGOs with limited capacity were providing support to people living with HIV/AIDS, but there was no association in Pakistan, whereas most of the countries in the region have established their associations a while ago,” Fawad Haider, a UNAIDS programme officer, said in the Pakistani capital, Islamabad, on Friday.
The overall objective of the association has been described as providing a platform to the Association of People Living With HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) to voice their concerns and to build their capacities to fight against the stigma and discrimination through improved knowledge of HIV/AIDS.
The South Asian nation is currently classified to be in the ‘concentrated epidemic’ stage by the definitions of the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNAIDS, where the number of new cases of HIV infection continues to rise.
According to Pakistan’s National AIDS Control Programme (NACP), a total of some 3,393 HIV/AIDS cases have been reported in the country, including 346 full-blown AIDS cases. However, estimates of HIV/AIDS cases in the country, according to WHO and UNAIDS, go as high as 85,000.
The number of actual reported cases to NACP has remained low due to underreporting and poor data collection and sharing, experts believed.
Pakistan is also considered as ‘high-risk’ for a further spread of HIV infection to the general population due to multiple factors.
These factors include; over 50 million of illiterate population, high prevalence of sexually transmitted diseases, high number of migrant workers - mostly in Gulf countries, high number of both male and female commercial sex workers, limited safety in blood transfusions, increasing number of injecting drug users (IDUs) and a highly mobile refugee population.
In Pakistan, youth make up the major chunk of HIV/AIDS vulnerability, with country’s 60 percent population being below 25.
“Of which some 32 million within the age group of 10-19 are highly vulnerable, since according to global trends, young people are becoming sexually active at a very young age,” Dr Asma Bukhari, head of NACP, explained.
“The newly established association would promote and advocate for an improved access to treatment, especially anti retroviral (ARVs) therapy and care and support for PLWHA,” Haider said.
Pakistani health authorities have recently started providing HIV/AIDS treatment services through eight care centres across the country. However, the scope of coverage in the face of a concentrated HIV epidemic remains limited, analysts say.
To boost HIV/AIDS awareness and educate young people to help them recognise their personal vulnerability, NACP has recently started interactive theatre programmes, including live street theatre. “We are also about to start youth programmes on FM radios,” Bukhari said.
However, since the HIV epidemic has entered a concentrated phase, a lot more efforts are needed to counter further spread of infection and provide support to already infected people, Haider of UNAIDS added.
This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions