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Issue 1: Gender Dimensions of HIV/AIDS
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Para 68.
Governments should ensure that prevention of and services for
sexually transmitted diseases and HIV/AIDS are an integral
component of reproductive and sexual health programmes at the
primary health-care level. Gender, age-based and other
differences in vulnerability to HIV
infection should be addressed in prevention and education
programmes and services. Governments should develop guidelines
for HIV treatment and care, emphasizing equitable access, and
for wide provision of and access to voluntary HIV testing and
counselling services, and should ensure wide provision of and
access to female and male condoms, including through social
marketing. Advocacy and information, education and communication
campaigns developed with communities and supported from the
highest levels of Government should promote informed,
responsible and safer sexual behaviour and practices, mutual
respect and gender equity in sexual relationships. Special
attention needs to be given to preventing sexual exploitation of
young women and children. Given the enhanced susceptibility to
HIV/AIDS of individuals infected by conventional and treatable
sexually transmitted diseases and the high prevalence of such
diseases among young people, priority must be given to the
prevention, detection, diagnosis and treatment of such
infections. Governments should immediately develop, in full
partnership with youth, parents, families, educators and
health-care providers, youth-specific HIV education and
treatment projects, with special emphasis on developing
peer-education programmes.
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7.28. The
social and economic disadvantages that women face make them
especially vulnerable to sexually transmitted infections,
including HIV, as illustrated, for example, by their exposure to
the high-risk sexual behaviour of their partners. For women, the
symptoms of infections from sexually transmitted diseases are
often hidden, making them more difficult to diagnose than in
men, and the health consequences are often greater, including
increased risk of infertility and ectopic pregnancy. The risk of
transmission from infected men to women is also greater than
from infected women to men, and many women are powerless to take
steps to protect themselves.
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7.29. The
objective is to prevent, reduce the incidence of, and provide
treatment for, sexually transmitted diseases, including
HIV/AIDS, and the complications of sexually transmitted diseases
such as infertility, with special attention to girls and women.
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7.34.
Human sexuality and gender relations are closely interrelated
and together affect the ability of men and women to achieve and
maintain sexual health and manage their reproductive lives.
Equal relationships between men and women in matters of sexual
relations and reproduction, including full respect for the
physical integrity of the human body, require mutual respect and
willingness to accept responsibility for the consequences of
sexual behaviour. Responsible sexual behaviour, sensitivity and
equity in gender relations, particularly when instilled during
the formative years, enhance and promote respectful and
harmonious partnerships between men and women.
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7.35.
Violence against women, particularly domestic violence and rape,
is widespread, and rising numbers of women are at risk from AIDS
and other sexually transmitted diseases as a result of high-risk
sexual behaviour on the part of their partners.
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98. HIV/AIDS and other sexually
transmitted diseases, the transmission of which is sometimes a
consequence of sexual violence, are having a devastating effect
on women's health, particularly the health of adolescent girls
and young women. They often do not have the power to insist on
safe and responsible sex practices and have little access to
information and services for prevention and treatment. Women,
who represent half of all adults newly infected with HIV/AIDS
and other sexually transmitted diseases, have emphasized that
social vulnerability and the unequal power relationships between
women and men are obstacles to safe sex, in their efforts to
control the spread of sexually transmitted diseases. The
consequences of HIV/AIDS reach beyond women's health to their
role as mothers and caregivers and their contribution to the
economic support of their families. The social, developmental
and health consequences of HIV/AIDS and other sexually
transmitted diseases need to be seen from a gender perspective.
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108 (e ). …facilitate promotion of
programmes to educate and enable men to assume their
responsibilities to prevent HIV/AIDS and other sexually
transmitted diseases;
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108 (l). Design specific programmes
for men of all ages and male adolescents, recognizing the
parental roles referred to in paragraph 107 (e) above, aimed at
providing complete and accurate information on safe and
responsible sexual and reproductive behaviour, including
voluntary, appropriate and effective male methods for the
prevention of HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases
through, inter alia, abstinence and condom use;
Beijing +5
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12. Such obstacles as unequal power
relationships between women and men, in which women often do not
have the power to insist on safe and responsible sex practices,
and a lack of communication and understanding between men and
women on women’s health needs, inter alia, endanger women’s
health, particularly by increasing their susceptibility to
sexually transmitted infections, including HIV/AIDS, and affect
women’s access to health care and education, especially in
relation to prevention.
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44. The rapid progression of the
HIV/AIDS pandemic, particularly in the developing world, has had
a devastating impact on women. Responsible behaviour and gender
equality are among the important prerequisites for its
prevention. There is also the need for more effective strategies
to empower women to have control over and decide freely and
responsibly on matters related to their sexuality, to protect
themselves from high risk and irresponsible behaviour leading to
sexually transmitted infections, including HIV/AIDS and to
promote responsible, safe and respectful behaviour by men and to
also promote gender equality. HIV/AIDS is an urgent public
health issue, is outstripping efforts to contain it and, in many
countries, is reversing hard-won gains of development. The
burden of care for people living with HIV/AIDS and for children
orphaned by HIV/AIDS falls particularly on women as
infrastructures are inadequate to respond to the challenges
being posed. Women with HIV/AIDS often suffer from
discrimination and stigma and are often victims of violence.
Issues related to prevention, mother-to-child transmission of
HIV, breastfeeding, information and education in particular of
youth, curbing high-risk behaviour, intravenous drug users,
support groups, counselling and voluntary testing, partner
notification and provision and high cost of essential drugs have
not been sufficiently addressed. There are positive signs in the
fight against HIV/AIDS in some countries that behavioural
changes have occurred among young people, and experience shows
that educational programmes for young people can lead to a more
positive view on gender relations and gender equality, delayed
sexual initiation and reduced risk of sexually transmitted
infections.
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