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HIV/AIDS in Honduras

Honduras is the Central American country most adversely affected by the HIV/AIDS epidemic.[1] It is estimated that the prevalence of HIV among Honduran adults is 1.5%.[2]

History edit

In a 1998 report released by the office of the Honduran Secretary of Public Health, the incubation period, during which HIV/AIDS was first introduced into the Honduran population without being recognized, is estimated to have been during the end of the 1970s and into the early 1980s. In 1984, the first case of HIV/AIDS in Honduras was identified in a man who reported having travelled to San Francisco multiple times in the years preceding his diagnosis, which was confirmed in 1985 when he tested positive for Kaposi's sarcoma and antibodies for HIV. Four men, all reporting having traveled outside of the country, constituted the first cases recognized in Honduras. Three of those men were likely to have contracted HIV from homosexual transmission, while one contracted the virus likely from heterosexual transmission.

By 1992, the 100 Honduran cases of HIV/AIDS included almost every risk group associated with HIV/AIDS: men who have sex with men (MSM), men who have sex with men and women (MSM/W), commercial sex workers, children of HIV-positive mothers, intravenous drug users, and blood transfusion recipients. Since spreading to other populations, HIV/AIDS is considered to be transmitted mainly heterosexually in Honduras and thought to have been introduced to the heterosexual population through bisexual transmission. Additionally, groups such as marines and soldiers, who have increased interaction with the exterior and are also more likely to have multiple sexual partners, contributed to the spread of HIV/AIDS throughout Honduras.[3] A 1997 study found prevalence of 6.8% among military recruits.[4]

In 1998, Honduras had the highest prevalence of HIV out of all seven Central American countries, in a study published by the office of the Honduran Secretary of Public Health. As of that same year, Hondurans made up only 17% of the Central American population, yet Honduras contained 50% of the initial AIDS cases in Central America[3] and 60% of all Central American cases in 2001.[5] In more recent years, new HIV infections have decreased by 29% since 2010 while AIDS-related deaths have increased by 11% since then.[6]

HIV/AIDS heavily affects the young, active, working population in Honduras, and HIV/AIDS deaths account for 10% of the overall national mortality rate.[7] As of 2008, AIDS was the leading cause of death among Honduran women of childbearing age and the second-leading cause of hospitalization among both men and women. Sexually transmitted infections are common, and condom use in risky sexual encounters is sporadic and variable.[4] HIV remains a mainly heterosexual epidemic in Honduras, as 90% of emerging infections are attributed to heterosexual transmission.[8]

Prevalence and causes edit

Geographical predominance edit

 
Map of Honduras, delineating its departments, and its capital Tegucigalpa

The areas most heavily affected by HIV/AIDS cases tend to be within what is called the Central Corridor of Development (Corridor Central de Desarrollo), affecting urban areas such as Tegucigalpa, San Pedro Sula, La Ceiba, El Progreso, Comayagua, Puerto Cortés, Tela, La Lima, and Choluteca. The disease originated in the northern part of the country, with especially high rates in Tegucigalpa and San Pedro Sula, which was the original epicenter of the disease.[3]

In San Pedro Sula, rates of HIV prevalence were estimated to be as high as 14 to 21% of the population at the height of the epidemic in Honduras. HIV/AIDS has since spread to the south, east, and west of Honduras, including the Honduran Bay Islands in the Caribbean, though these regions were affected later.[3] Municipalities with the highest reported incidences of HIV infection are found on the border with neighboring countries El Salvador, Guatemala, and Nicaragua.[1] On the northern coast of Honduras, the Garífuna minority group experiences particularly high rates of HIV prevalence.[2]

Demographical predominance edit

HIV/AIDS has most affected young people in Honduras, ranging from 20 to 39 years of age.[3] The main risk groups associated with HIV/AIDS in Honduras are female sex workers (FSWs), men who have sex with men (MSM), the Garífuna community, prisoners, and transgender women.[1]

The United Nations Joint Programme on AIDS (UNAIDS) released the following statistics regarding the HIV prevalence among different risk groups in Honduras:[9]

  • 5.3% among sex workers
  • 11.7% among gay men and men who have sex with men
  • 11.9% among transgender people

Prevalence rates among prisoners have been found to be as high as 7.6%.[10] In 2005 the national prevalence among sex workers was 9.68% according to a UNAIDS document on CONASIDA. 47% of the cases of HIV recorded in 2004 were women,[7] and in that same year around 0.5% of women in antenatal surveillance studies were HIV positive.[11] Overall, women account for more of emerging infections than men do.[8]

Proposed national causes edit

While it is not known exactly why the epidemic in Honduras became so severe, some experts, such as epidemiologists like Manuel Sierra, attribute its severity to the long incubation period of the disease in the country. Other reasons to which specialists attribute the state of the Honduran epidemic include increased international military presence due to the Cold War, during which Honduras experienced an influx of both international military personnel and also contras from neighboring Nicaragua, who helped to stimulate the commercial sex industry on a national level.[10]

Among the Garífuna edit

The Garífuna, of Afro-Caribbean descent, are one of at least eight minority groups within Honduras and one of the few for which HIV prevalence rates are known.[11] Heterosexual transmission rates among the Garífuna are comparable to those of sub-Saharan Africa.[12] As of 2005, the prevalence of HIV among the Garífuna was estimated to be somewhere between 8 and 14% of this population.[7]

Among this population, condom use was reported in 2009 to be only 10.6% in stable couples and 41.4% in casual couples.[13] HIV was higher among Garífunas residing in urban areas. In addition to low condom use and urban living, researchers suggest that the high rates of HIV prevalence may be due to the migratory working patterns of Garífuna men, who often travel seasonally to the United States or cities, such as San Pedro Sula where HIV prevalence is particularly high, for their jobs in shipping and fishing. Other possible contributing factors are sexual violence, the inability of women to control their sexual experiences, multiple sex partners, remuneration received for sex, with 6% of subjects reporting having received money for sex in a 2009 study, and first sexual encounters for men at 15 and women at 17.[11]

Prevalence among Garífuna was 3.8% among men and 5.1% among women as of 2006, indicating rates more than three times those of the national average. In a 2015 study, men were found to be more than four times as likely to have had multiple sex partners within the last 12 months than women.[8] Garífuna women remain an especially disenfranchised group and have been subject to treatment methods as radical as forced sterilization.[2] Only 9% of Garífuna men were reported to have been circumcised,[11] which is proven to be a successful method at lowering risk of HIV contraction through heterosexual transmission by as much as 60%.[14] High rates of other sexually transmitted infections (STIs) such as syphilis and herpes (HSV-2) were also found among the Garífuna in a 2009 study,[11] and high rates of other STIs are linked to a higher risk of HIV infection.[15]

Although traditional health care is available to some within this community, the Garífuna have also developed their own methods of educating their community and spreading knowledge of prevention: utilizing their traditional musical forms to accompany informational plays about HIV/AIDS.[16] Organizations, such as the Pan American Social Marketing Organization (PASMO), have adopted similar education tactics, such as bingo games in which each space on a playing card contains a picture of HIV/AIDS or another STD.[10]

National response edit

Early response edit

National efforts to reduce the number of new HIV infections have been in place since the late 1980s. The national response to HIV/AIDS has been led by the Ministry of Health, with collaboration from other ministries and several nongovernmental organizations (NGOs). The Health Secretariat solidified the creation of the National AIDS Control Program (PNS) between 1989 and 1994 in an effort to improve health infrastructure, create a national counseling network, and standardize treatment for Hondurans living with HIV/AIDS. During this same time period, the National AIDS Commission (COMSIDA) was also founded.[1]

Since the beginning of its involvement in preventing the spread of HIV, the Honduran government has sought to establish multi-sector programs, such as COMSIDA, which was reorganized in 1999 into CONASIDA, with fifteen national institutions or organizations represented. Similarly, the Strategic Plan for the Fight Against AIDS, in place from 1998 to 2002, included the response capabilities of both governmental and nongovernmental bodies and organizations.[1] By the beginning of the 1990s, blood began to be screened for HIV on a national scale in Honduras, five years after the US began screening blood donations. HIV/AIDS cases due to blood transfusions began to decrease by 1991.[3]

Recent response and current policies edit

HIV/AIDS was declared a national priority between 2002 and 2006 under President Ricardo Maduro,[7] who publicly committed himself to support the national response to HIV/AIDS and identified HIV/AIDS as one of five health issues to receive priority government attention.

Current programs focus on prevention, education, comprehensive care, and the rights of HIV-positive people. Prevention efforts, executed among various governmental and nongovernmental organizations like NGOs, churches, and schools, have specifically targeted groups especially at risk for HIV/AIDS, such as sex workers, members of the gay and lesbian community, mobile populations, and members of the Garífuna ethnic population. In the education system, teachers were trained in 2005 to educate their students about reproductive health, STIs, and HIV/AIDS, and these topics have become integrated into the national curriculum in Honduran schools.[7]

Despite these education and awareness efforts, in 2013, still around half of Hondurans infected were unaware they were living with HIV.[17] Honduras’s long-term plan is to prevent new infections and to provide services to those who are most at risk for HIV infection, including young people, sex workers, men who have sex with men, institutionalized persons, and the Garífuna ethnic group. In 2017, the Ministry of Health resolved to cover all treatment for those living with HIV, regardless of CD4 count, and internal funding covers 95% and 70% of treatment costs and preventative efforts respectively.[6]

International response and aid edit

The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria has disbursed US$90,720,054 of the US$96,502,161 originally signed to Honduras for HIV/AIDS programs alone. According to USAIDS, another international body that supports programs addressing HIV/AIDS in Honduras, Global Fund programs have three main goals: to promote the protection of the rights of people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA), create awareness surrounding risks and risk-reducing measures among particularly vulnerable populations, and make health services more accessible to these populations.[18]

The Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) has been another significant supporter of HIV/AIDS prevention, treatment, and care in Honduras. Other international bodies that have assisted programs in Honduras include the Swedish International Development Agency, Canadian International Development Agency, Department for International Development (United Kingdom), Humanist Institute for Development Cooperation, Christian Aid, Catholic Relief Services, German Cooperation Agency, Cooperative for American Relief Everywhere, Inc. (CARE), and the Red Cross. USAID programs include partnership directly with the Honduran government through projects such as AIDSTAR-One (AIDS Support and Technical Assistance Resources) but also include funding of individual, local organizations and NGOs, such as Fundación para el Fomento en Salud.[19]

Doctors Without Borders (Medecins sans Frotieres) has been active in Honduras since 1974. Their HIV/AIDS programs in Honduras focus on antenatal care and their servicio prioritario, or priority service, which consists of free and confidential post-exposure prophylaxis and psychological counseling to rape victims. As of 2017, Doctors Without Borders had provided 2,300 mental health consultations, 6,800 antenatal consultations, 800 postnatal consultations, assisted in 400 births, and treated 600 patients after experiences of sexual violence.[20]

Access to ARV treatment edit

Antiretroviral therapy was only offered in the Honduran public health system as of 2002. In 2001, 18 million lempiras were allocated to the purchase of ART in 2002, and the Honduran government aims to achieve universal ART access. Currently, the Honduran government spends 40 million lempiras annually to provide this treatment.[21] In 2005, it was estimated that 4,500 people were receiving ART treatment, but CONASIDA estimated that only one-third of people with advanced HIV were actually receiving their drugs.[10]

Beyond simply providing the antiretroviral drugs themselves, programs such as the Inter-institutional Alliance for the Improved Nutrition of People Living with HIV/AIDS (IMANAS) have attempted to alleviate among households receiving ART the added stressor of lack of food, which can negatively impact people's ability to adhere to their ART regimens.[7] Despite these efforts, in a study published in 2011, researchers found that 87% of households receiving ART in Honduras were food insecure, which was reflected by the 15% of these households in which ART adherence was inadequate.[22]

In 2013, 42% of people were still accessing health care and receiving treatment after 12 months, and one in three patients had reached an undetectable viral load.[17] As of 2016, 51% of Honduras affected by HIV/AIDS were able to receive antiretroviral treatment (ART), and 54% of HIV-positive pregnant women were receiving treatment or had utilized prophylaxis as a means of prevention of mother to child transmission (PMTCT).[6] As of 2018, a total of 12,789 individuals were reported to be receiving ART, according to El Heraldo.[21]

Activism edit

The Special Law on HIV/AIDS, passed by Congress and allowing CONASIDA to be formed in order to protect the rights of Hondurans living with HIV/AIDS, is attributed greatly to activism on the part of Hondurans living with HIV/AIDS and civil society workers in a 2005 special report created for the United Nations General Assembly Special Session on HIV/AIDS.[7]

Honduran National Association of People Living with HIV (Asociación Nacional de Honduras de Personas que Viven con el VIH) edit

The Honduran National Association of People Living with HIV, in part facilitated by USAID funds, has served to empower those in Honduras living with HIV/AIDS and was established to protect their human rights.[23] It was founded by Allan Dunaway, who served as its president and give a face to HIV/AIDS in Honduras and essentially all of Latin America, as he was one of the first Latin American HIV/AIDS activists. He and his wife, Rosa González, were the first couple to publicly reveal their HIV-positive status. Together, they founded Fundación Llaves. Dunaway worked directly with the National Commission of Human Rights (Comisionado Nacional de los Derechos Humanos). Representing their organization, Dunaway and his wife traveled to the International AIDS Conference in New York City in 2008.[24]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e "Country". www.theglobalfund.org. Retrieved 2018-10-25.
  2. ^ a b c Atkinson HG, Ottenheimer D (May 2018). "Involuntary sterilization among HIV-positive Garifuna women from Honduras seeking asylum in the United States: Two case reports". Journal of Forensic and Legal Medicine. 56: 94–98. doi:10.1016/j.jflm.2018.03.018. PMID 29635207.
  3. ^ a b c d e f García Trujillo, Odalys; Paredes, Mayté; Sierra, Manuel (July 1998). "VIH/SIDA: Análisis de la Evolución de la Epidemia en Honduras" (PDF). Universidad de Costa Rica.
  4. ^ a b "Health Profile: Honduras" 2008-09-13 at the Wayback Machine. United States Agency for International Development (March 2005). Accessed September 7, 2008.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  5. ^ "Country: Proposal HIV/AIDS R09 (PDF)". www.theglobalfund.org. Retrieved 2018-10-25.
  6. ^ a b c "Honduras". www.unaids.org (in Spanish). Retrieved 2018-11-06.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g "Honduras: Follow-Up Report to the Commitment on HIV/AIDS" (PDF). UNAIDS. 2005.
  8. ^ a b c Gandhi AD, Pettifor A, Barrington C, Marshall SW, Behets F, Guardado ME, Farach N, Ardón E, Paz-Bailey G (September 2015). "Migration, Multiple Sexual Partnerships, and Sexual Concurrency in the Garífuna Population of Honduras". AIDS and Behavior. 19 (9): 1559–70. doi:10.1007/s10461-015-1139-2. PMC 4714585. PMID 26242612.
  9. ^ "Honduras". www.unaids.org. Retrieved 2018-11-08.
  10. ^ a b c d Cohen, Jon (2006-07-28). "Why So High? A Knotty Story". Science. 313 (5786): 481–483. doi:10.1126/science.313.5786.481. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 16873650. S2CID 36511650.
  11. ^ a b c d e Paz-Bailey, Gabriela; et al. (2009). "High Rates of STD and Sexual Risk Behaviors Among Garífunas in Honduras". Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes. 51, Supplement 1: S26–34. doi:10.1097/QAI.0b013e3181a2647b. PMID 19384098. S2CID 18623932 – via Ovid.
  12. ^ Sabin M, Luber G, Sabin K, Paredes M, Monterroso E (September 2008), "Rapid ethnographic assessment of HIV/AIDS among Garifuna communities in Honduras: informing HIV surveillance among Garifuna women.", Journal of Human Behavior in the Social Environment, 17 (3–4): 237–57, doi:10.1080/10911350802067773, S2CID 72221916
  13. ^ "UNAIDS releases report on global AIDS efforts". 2006. doi:10.1037/e672442007-017. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  14. ^ . World Health Organization. Archived from the original on May 14, 2007. Retrieved 2018-11-08.
  15. ^ "Detailed STD Facts - HIV/AIDS & STDs". www.cdc.gov. 2018-09-14. Retrieved 2018-11-08.
  16. ^ "In Honduras, Fighting HIV/AIDS Through Music And Theater". NPR.org. Retrieved 2018-11-15.
  17. ^ a b "Country: Concept Note HIV/AIDS - 2015 (PDF)". www.theglobalfund.org. Retrieved 2018-10-25.
  18. ^ Terrell, Stanley (January 2011). "USAID/Honduras: HIV/AIDS Prevention Programs Evaluation" (PDF). unesco.org. Retrieved October 12, 2018.
  19. ^ "USAID/Honduras: HIV/AIDS Prevention Programs Evaluation" (PDF). UNESCO. January 2011. Retrieved October 12, 2018.
  20. ^ "Honduras | Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) International". Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) International. Retrieved 2018-11-15.
  21. ^ a b "Tres personas se infectan a diario con VIH en Honduras - Diario El Heraldo". Diario El Heraldo (in Spanish). Retrieved 2018-10-28.
  22. ^ Martinez, Homero; Ramirez, Blanca Yohisy; Palar, Kartika; Adams, Jayne; Farias, Hugo; Green, Hank; Wagner, Glenn; Derose, Katie (2011-04-01). "Food security, nutrition and HIV/AIDS – overview and context in Honduras". The FASEB Journal. 25 (1_supplement): 780.6. doi:10.1096/fasebj.25.1_supplement.780.6. S2CID 69096825.
  23. ^ "Diagnóstico de los Servicios Ofrecidos por la Asociación Nacional de Personas Viviendo con VIH/SIDA en Honduras". AIDSFree. 2015-09-14. Retrieved 2018-10-29.
  24. ^ "En memoria de Allan Dunaway, fundador y presidente de la Asociación Nacional de Honduras de Personas que Viven con el VIH". www.unaids.org (in Spanish). Retrieved 2018-10-29.

aids, honduras, honduras, central, american, country, most, adversely, affected, aids, epidemic, estimated, that, prevalence, among, honduran, adults, contents, history, prevalence, causes, geographical, predominance, demographical, predominance, proposed, nat. Honduras is the Central American country most adversely affected by the HIV AIDS epidemic 1 It is estimated that the prevalence of HIV among Honduran adults is 1 5 2 Contents 1 History 2 Prevalence and causes 2 1 Geographical predominance 2 2 Demographical predominance 2 3 Proposed national causes 2 4 Among the Garifuna 3 National response 3 1 Early response 3 2 Recent response and current policies 4 International response and aid 5 Access to ARV treatment 6 Activism 6 1 Honduran National Association of People Living with HIV Asociacion Nacional de Honduras de Personas que Viven con el VIH 7 See also 8 ReferencesHistory editIn a 1998 report released by the office of the Honduran Secretary of Public Health the incubation period during which HIV AIDS was first introduced into the Honduran population without being recognized is estimated to have been during the end of the 1970s and into the early 1980s In 1984 the first case of HIV AIDS in Honduras was identified in a man who reported having travelled to San Francisco multiple times in the years preceding his diagnosis which was confirmed in 1985 when he tested positive for Kaposi s sarcoma and antibodies for HIV Four men all reporting having traveled outside of the country constituted the first cases recognized in Honduras Three of those men were likely to have contracted HIV from homosexual transmission while one contracted the virus likely from heterosexual transmission By 1992 the 100 Honduran cases of HIV AIDS included almost every risk group associated with HIV AIDS men who have sex with men MSM men who have sex with men and women MSM W commercial sex workers children of HIV positive mothers intravenous drug users and blood transfusion recipients Since spreading to other populations HIV AIDS is considered to be transmitted mainly heterosexually in Honduras and thought to have been introduced to the heterosexual population through bisexual transmission Additionally groups such as marines and soldiers who have increased interaction with the exterior and are also more likely to have multiple sexual partners contributed to the spread of HIV AIDS throughout Honduras 3 A 1997 study found prevalence of 6 8 among military recruits 4 In 1998 Honduras had the highest prevalence of HIV out of all seven Central American countries in a study published by the office of the Honduran Secretary of Public Health As of that same year Hondurans made up only 17 of the Central American population yet Honduras contained 50 of the initial AIDS cases in Central America 3 and 60 of all Central American cases in 2001 5 In more recent years new HIV infections have decreased by 29 since 2010 while AIDS related deaths have increased by 11 since then 6 HIV AIDS heavily affects the young active working population in Honduras and HIV AIDS deaths account for 10 of the overall national mortality rate 7 As of 2008 AIDS was the leading cause of death among Honduran women of childbearing age and the second leading cause of hospitalization among both men and women Sexually transmitted infections are common and condom use in risky sexual encounters is sporadic and variable 4 HIV remains a mainly heterosexual epidemic in Honduras as 90 of emerging infections are attributed to heterosexual transmission 8 Prevalence and causes editGeographical predominance edit nbsp Map of Honduras delineating its departments and its capital Tegucigalpa The areas most heavily affected by HIV AIDS cases tend to be within what is called the Central Corridor of Development Corridor Central de Desarrollo affecting urban areas such as Tegucigalpa San Pedro Sula La Ceiba El Progreso Comayagua Puerto Cortes Tela La Lima and Choluteca The disease originated in the northern part of the country with especially high rates in Tegucigalpa and San Pedro Sula which was the original epicenter of the disease 3 In San Pedro Sula rates of HIV prevalence were estimated to be as high as 14 to 21 of the population at the height of the epidemic in Honduras HIV AIDS has since spread to the south east and west of Honduras including the Honduran Bay Islands in the Caribbean though these regions were affected later 3 Municipalities with the highest reported incidences of HIV infection are found on the border with neighboring countries El Salvador Guatemala and Nicaragua 1 On the northern coast of Honduras the Garifuna minority group experiences particularly high rates of HIV prevalence 2 Demographical predominance edit HIV AIDS has most affected young people in Honduras ranging from 20 to 39 years of age 3 The main risk groups associated with HIV AIDS in Honduras are female sex workers FSWs men who have sex with men MSM the Garifuna community prisoners and transgender women 1 The United Nations Joint Programme on AIDS UNAIDS released the following statistics regarding the HIV prevalence among different risk groups in Honduras 9 5 3 among sex workers 11 7 among gay men and men who have sex with men 11 9 among transgender people Prevalence rates among prisoners have been found to be as high as 7 6 10 In 2005 the national prevalence among sex workers was 9 68 according to a UNAIDS document on CONASIDA 47 of the cases of HIV recorded in 2004 were women 7 and in that same year around 0 5 of women in antenatal surveillance studies were HIV positive 11 Overall women account for more of emerging infections than men do 8 Proposed national causes edit While it is not known exactly why the epidemic in Honduras became so severe some experts such as epidemiologists like Manuel Sierra attribute its severity to the long incubation period of the disease in the country Other reasons to which specialists attribute the state of the Honduran epidemic include increased international military presence due to the Cold War during which Honduras experienced an influx of both international military personnel and also contras from neighboring Nicaragua who helped to stimulate the commercial sex industry on a national level 10 Among the Garifuna edit The Garifuna of Afro Caribbean descent are one of at least eight minority groups within Honduras and one of the few for which HIV prevalence rates are known 11 Heterosexual transmission rates among the Garifuna are comparable to those of sub Saharan Africa 12 As of 2005 the prevalence of HIV among the Garifuna was estimated to be somewhere between 8 and 14 of this population 7 Among this population condom use was reported in 2009 to be only 10 6 in stable couples and 41 4 in casual couples 13 HIV was higher among Garifunas residing in urban areas In addition to low condom use and urban living researchers suggest that the high rates of HIV prevalence may be due to the migratory working patterns of Garifuna men who often travel seasonally to the United States or cities such as San Pedro Sula where HIV prevalence is particularly high for their jobs in shipping and fishing Other possible contributing factors are sexual violence the inability of women to control their sexual experiences multiple sex partners remuneration received for sex with 6 of subjects reporting having received money for sex in a 2009 study and first sexual encounters for men at 15 and women at 17 11 Prevalence among Garifuna was 3 8 among men and 5 1 among women as of 2006 indicating rates more than three times those of the national average In a 2015 study men were found to be more than four times as likely to have had multiple sex partners within the last 12 months than women 8 Garifuna women remain an especially disenfranchised group and have been subject to treatment methods as radical as forced sterilization 2 Only 9 of Garifuna men were reported to have been circumcised 11 which is proven to be a successful method at lowering risk of HIV contraction through heterosexual transmission by as much as 60 14 High rates of other sexually transmitted infections STIs such as syphilis and herpes HSV 2 were also found among the Garifuna in a 2009 study 11 and high rates of other STIs are linked to a higher risk of HIV infection 15 Although traditional health care is available to some within this community the Garifuna have also developed their own methods of educating their community and spreading knowledge of prevention utilizing their traditional musical forms to accompany informational plays about HIV AIDS 16 Organizations such as the Pan American Social Marketing Organization PASMO have adopted similar education tactics such as bingo games in which each space on a playing card contains a picture of HIV AIDS or another STD 10 National response editEarly response edit National efforts to reduce the number of new HIV infections have been in place since the late 1980s The national response to HIV AIDS has been led by the Ministry of Health with collaboration from other ministries and several nongovernmental organizations NGOs The Health Secretariat solidified the creation of the National AIDS Control Program PNS between 1989 and 1994 in an effort to improve health infrastructure create a national counseling network and standardize treatment for Hondurans living with HIV AIDS During this same time period the National AIDS Commission COMSIDA was also founded 1 Since the beginning of its involvement in preventing the spread of HIV the Honduran government has sought to establish multi sector programs such as COMSIDA which was reorganized in 1999 into CONASIDA with fifteen national institutions or organizations represented Similarly the Strategic Plan for the Fight Against AIDS in place from 1998 to 2002 included the response capabilities of both governmental and nongovernmental bodies and organizations 1 By the beginning of the 1990s blood began to be screened for HIV on a national scale in Honduras five years after the US began screening blood donations HIV AIDS cases due to blood transfusions began to decrease by 1991 3 Recent response and current policies edit HIV AIDS was declared a national priority between 2002 and 2006 under President Ricardo Maduro 7 who publicly committed himself to support the national response to HIV AIDS and identified HIV AIDS as one of five health issues to receive priority government attention Current programs focus on prevention education comprehensive care and the rights of HIV positive people Prevention efforts executed among various governmental and nongovernmental organizations like NGOs churches and schools have specifically targeted groups especially at risk for HIV AIDS such as sex workers members of the gay and lesbian community mobile populations and members of the Garifuna ethnic population In the education system teachers were trained in 2005 to educate their students about reproductive health STIs and HIV AIDS and these topics have become integrated into the national curriculum in Honduran schools 7 Despite these education and awareness efforts in 2013 still around half of Hondurans infected were unaware they were living with HIV 17 Honduras s long term plan is to prevent new infections and to provide services to those who are most at risk for HIV infection including young people sex workers men who have sex with men institutionalized persons and the Garifuna ethnic group In 2017 the Ministry of Health resolved to cover all treatment for those living with HIV regardless of CD4 count and internal funding covers 95 and 70 of treatment costs and preventative efforts respectively 6 International response and aid editThe Global Fund to Fight AIDS Tuberculosis and Malaria has disbursed US 90 720 054 of the US 96 502 161 originally signed to Honduras for HIV AIDS programs alone According to USAIDS another international body that supports programs addressing HIV AIDS in Honduras Global Fund programs have three main goals to promote the protection of the rights of people living with HIV AIDS PLWHA create awareness surrounding risks and risk reducing measures among particularly vulnerable populations and make health services more accessible to these populations 18 The Joint United Nations Programme on HIV AIDS UNAIDS has been another significant supporter of HIV AIDS prevention treatment and care in Honduras Other international bodies that have assisted programs in Honduras include the Swedish International Development Agency Canadian International Development Agency Department for International Development United Kingdom Humanist Institute for Development Cooperation Christian Aid Catholic Relief Services German Cooperation Agency Cooperative for American Relief Everywhere Inc CARE and the Red Cross USAID programs include partnership directly with the Honduran government through projects such as AIDSTAR One AIDS Support and Technical Assistance Resources but also include funding of individual local organizations and NGOs such as Fundacion para el Fomento en Salud 19 Doctors Without Borders Medecins sans Frotieres has been active in Honduras since 1974 Their HIV AIDS programs in Honduras focus on antenatal care and their servicio prioritario or priority service which consists of free and confidential post exposure prophylaxis and psychological counseling to rape victims As of 2017 Doctors Without Borders had provided 2 300 mental health consultations 6 800 antenatal consultations 800 postnatal consultations assisted in 400 births and treated 600 patients after experiences of sexual violence 20 Access to ARV treatment editAntiretroviral therapy was only offered in the Honduran public health system as of 2002 In 2001 18 million lempiras were allocated to the purchase of ART in 2002 and the Honduran government aims to achieve universal ART access Currently the Honduran government spends 40 million lempiras annually to provide this treatment 21 In 2005 it was estimated that 4 500 people were receiving ART treatment but CONASIDA estimated that only one third of people with advanced HIV were actually receiving their drugs 10 Beyond simply providing the antiretroviral drugs themselves programs such as the Inter institutional Alliance for the Improved Nutrition of People Living with HIV AIDS IMANAS have attempted to alleviate among households receiving ART the added stressor of lack of food which can negatively impact people s ability to adhere to their ART regimens 7 Despite these efforts in a study published in 2011 researchers found that 87 of households receiving ART in Honduras were food insecure which was reflected by the 15 of these households in which ART adherence was inadequate 22 In 2013 42 of people were still accessing health care and receiving treatment after 12 months and one in three patients had reached an undetectable viral load 17 As of 2016 51 of Honduras affected by HIV AIDS were able to receive antiretroviral treatment ART and 54 of HIV positive pregnant women were receiving treatment or had utilized prophylaxis as a means of prevention of mother to child transmission PMTCT 6 As of 2018 a total of 12 789 individuals were reported to be receiving ART according to El Heraldo 21 Activism editThe Special Law on HIV AIDS passed by Congress and allowing CONASIDA to be formed in order to protect the rights of Hondurans living with HIV AIDS is attributed greatly to activism on the part of Hondurans living with HIV AIDS and civil society workers in a 2005 special report created for the United Nations General Assembly Special Session on HIV AIDS 7 Honduran National Association of People Living with HIV Asociacion Nacional de Honduras de Personas que Viven con el VIH edit The Honduran National Association of People Living with HIV in part facilitated by USAID funds has served to empower those in Honduras living with HIV AIDS and was established to protect their human rights 23 It was founded by Allan Dunaway who served as its president and give a face to HIV AIDS in Honduras and essentially all of Latin America as he was one of the first Latin American HIV AIDS activists He and his wife Rosa Gonzalez were the first couple to publicly reveal their HIV positive status Together they founded Fundacion Llaves Dunaway worked directly with the National Commission of Human Rights Comisionado Nacional de los Derechos Humanos Representing their organization Dunaway and his wife traveled to the International AIDS Conference in New York City in 2008 24 See also editHIV AIDS in North America HIV AIDS in South America nbsp Honduras portalReferences edit a b c d e Country www theglobalfund org Retrieved 2018 10 25 a b c Atkinson HG Ottenheimer D May 2018 Involuntary sterilization among HIV positive Garifuna women from Honduras seeking asylum in the United States Two case reports Journal of Forensic and Legal Medicine 56 94 98 doi 10 1016 j jflm 2018 03 018 PMID 29635207 a b c d e f Garcia Trujillo Odalys Paredes Mayte Sierra Manuel July 1998 VIH SIDA Analisis de la Evolucion de la Epidemia en Honduras PDF Universidad de Costa Rica a b Health Profile Honduras Archived 2008 09 13 at the Wayback Machine United States Agency for International Development March 2005 Accessed September 7 2008 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Country Proposal HIV AIDS R09 PDF www theglobalfund org Retrieved 2018 10 25 a b c Honduras www unaids org in Spanish Retrieved 2018 11 06 a b c d e f g Honduras Follow Up Report to the Commitment on HIV AIDS PDF UNAIDS 2005 a b c Gandhi AD Pettifor A Barrington C Marshall SW Behets F Guardado ME Farach N Ardon E Paz Bailey G September 2015 Migration Multiple Sexual Partnerships and Sexual Concurrency in the Garifuna Population of Honduras AIDS and Behavior 19 9 1559 70 doi 10 1007 s10461 015 1139 2 PMC 4714585 PMID 26242612 Honduras www unaids org Retrieved 2018 11 08 a b c d Cohen Jon 2006 07 28 Why So High A Knotty Story Science 313 5786 481 483 doi 10 1126 science 313 5786 481 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 16873650 S2CID 36511650 a b c d e Paz Bailey Gabriela et al 2009 High Rates of STD and Sexual Risk Behaviors Among Garifunas in Honduras Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes 51 Supplement 1 S26 34 doi 10 1097 QAI 0b013e3181a2647b PMID 19384098 S2CID 18623932 via Ovid Sabin M Luber G Sabin K Paredes M Monterroso E September 2008 Rapid ethnographic assessment of HIV AIDS among Garifuna communities in Honduras informing HIV surveillance among Garifuna women Journal of Human Behavior in the Social Environment 17 3 4 237 57 doi 10 1080 10911350802067773 S2CID 72221916 UNAIDS releases report on global AIDS efforts 2006 doi 10 1037 e672442007 017 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Male circumcision for HIV prevention World Health Organization Archived from the original on May 14 2007 Retrieved 2018 11 08 Detailed STD Facts HIV AIDS amp STDs www cdc gov 2018 09 14 Retrieved 2018 11 08 In Honduras Fighting HIV AIDS Through Music And Theater NPR org Retrieved 2018 11 15 a b Country Concept Note HIV AIDS 2015 PDF www theglobalfund org Retrieved 2018 10 25 Terrell Stanley January 2011 USAID Honduras HIV AIDS Prevention Programs Evaluation PDF unesco org Retrieved October 12 2018 USAID Honduras HIV AIDS Prevention Programs Evaluation PDF UNESCO January 2011 Retrieved October 12 2018 Honduras Medecins Sans Frontieres MSF International Medecins Sans Frontieres MSF International Retrieved 2018 11 15 a b Tres personas se infectan a diario con VIH en Honduras Diario El Heraldo Diario El Heraldo in Spanish Retrieved 2018 10 28 Martinez Homero Ramirez Blanca Yohisy Palar Kartika Adams Jayne Farias Hugo Green Hank Wagner Glenn Derose Katie 2011 04 01 Food security nutrition and HIV AIDS overview and context in Honduras The FASEB Journal 25 1 supplement 780 6 doi 10 1096 fasebj 25 1 supplement 780 6 S2CID 69096825 Diagnostico de los Servicios Ofrecidos por la Asociacion Nacional de Personas Viviendo con VIH SIDA en Honduras AIDSFree 2015 09 14 Retrieved 2018 10 29 En memoria de Allan Dunaway fundador y presidente de la Asociacion Nacional de Honduras de Personas que Viven con el VIH www unaids org in Spanish Retrieved 2018 10 29 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title HIV AIDS in Honduras amp oldid 1215966848, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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