Africa Asia Middle East Français Português Subscribe IRIN Site Map
PlusNews
Global HIV/AIDS news and analysis
Advanced search
 Wednesday 03 October 2007
 
Home 
Africa 
Weekly reports 
In-Depth reports 
Country profiles 
Fact files 
Events 
Jobs 
Really Simple Syndication Feeds 
About PlusNews 
Donors 
Contact PlusNews 
 
Print report
TANZANIA: Sexual abuse, poverty puts disabled at high HIV risk


Photo: IRIN
Activists are calling for new prevention approaches to protect the disabled
DAR ES SALAAM, 18 May 2006 (PlusNews) - AIDS activists in Tanzania are becoming increasingly concerned about rising HIV/AIDS among mentally and physically disabled people, a group generally perceived to be at lower risk of contracting the virus.

"Infections among disabled women have shot up astonishingly in recent months and we attribute this to their physical inability to ward off sexual attackers," said Dr Semkuya, who heads the natal section of the state-run Mwananyamala Hospital in the commercial capital, Dar es Salaam.

"Some disabled women are lured into unprotected sex by partners who presume them to be in the low-risk group. Mentally sick women are raped, and we only discover this when they are pregnant and brought to antenatal clinics by the relations," he added.

Semkuya said between two and four disabled pregnant women were found to be HIV-positive every month at the clinic, but noted that although many were raped, extreme poverty forced others to have sex as a means of economic survival.

A senior official of the Tanzania Association of the Disabled, Philemon Rujwahula, told delegates from Ethiopia, Ghana and Uganda at a recent international conference in Dar es Salaam that the perception that people with disabilities were "safe" was encouraging unprotected sex with people who had physical or mental health problems.

He said Tanzania's national HIV/AIDS policy excluded people with disabilities, reinforcing the perception that they were social misfits. He called for new approaches to protect the disabled.

"What we have diagnosed is just the tip of the iceberg. Most handicapped people who are sexually abused never make it to the hospital because they already are stigmatised and handicapped by their very nature of being disabled, and when women conceive and contract HIV/AIDS, their social status becomes worse," Semkuya said.

Mpendwa Chihimba, chairperson of Women Fighting AIDS in Tanzania, a local nongovernmental organisation, acknowledged the magnitude of the problem.

"There used to be few and isolated cases in the past, but the frequency with which it is happening is alarming, and complicates the strategies the country has put in place to combat HIV/AIDS," she said. "It is traumatising to see a mentally sick woman pregnant - it is heartbreaking to hear that an expectant woman has also been diagnosed HIV-positive."

Chihimba said the problem called for a new policy to address the special needs of disabled people living with the HI virus.

"This is a challenge to the government and society: to address the physiological and health needs of the disabled, or else their right to life will be perpetually under threat as result of sexual exploitation and abuse," she said.


Theme(s): (IRIN) Care/Treatment - PlusNews

[ENDS]

[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]
Print report
FREE Subscriptions
Your e-mail address:


Submit your request
 More on Tanzania
12/Sep/2007
AFRICA: MPs must push for women's access to health services
24/Aug/2007
GLOBAL: US company sues American Red Cross over use of Red Cross emblem
22/Aug/2007
IRIN: Today's most popular IRIN articles
27/Jul/2007
TANZANIA: Escalating drug use threatens AIDS fight
25/Jul/2007
TANZANIA: Tausi Ki Parara, "I felt like if I touched someone I would infect them"
 More on Care/Treatment - PlusNews
01/Oct/2007
ZIMBABWE: Bulawayo's water crisis cripples AIDS efforts
28/Sep/2007
INDONESIA: Injecting more than drugs
26/Sep/2007
GLOBAL: UNAIDS counts the cost of universal access
25/Sep/2007
MOZAMBIQUE: Businesses invest in AIDS fight
20/Sep/2007
NIGERIA: Treatment scale-up urgently needed
Back | Home page

Services:  Africa | Asia | Middle East | Radio | Film & TV | Photo | E-mail subscription
Feedback · E-mail Webmaster · IRIN Terms & Conditions · Really Simple Syndication News Feeds · About PlusNews · Bookmark PlusNews · Donors

Copyright © IRIN 2007
This material comes to you via IRIN, the humanitarian news and analysis service of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. The opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect those of the United Nations or its Member States. Republication is subject to terms and conditions as set out in the IRIN copyright page.