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Expanding Access to RH and Maternal Health Services for Adolescents Girls Living with HIV

Expanding Access to RH and Maternal Health Services for Adolescents Girls Living with HIV. Harriet Birungi and Francis Obare Reproductive Health Program, Population Council December 3, 2009 Presentation at meeting on Integrating HIV/AIDS and Maternal Health Services, organized by

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Expanding Access to RH and Maternal Health Services for Adolescents Girls Living with HIV

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  1. Expanding Access to RH and Maternal Health Services for Adolescents Girls Living with HIV Harriet Birungi and Francis Obare Reproductive Health Program, Population Council December 3, 2009 Presentation at meeting on Integrating HIV/AIDS and Maternal Health Services, organized by Global Health Initiative

  2. Background: HIV prevalence among adolescent girls

  3. HIV+ adolescent girls face additional challenges … • RH and maternal health services in much of Africa are not adolescent-friendly • Being HIV+ is additional source of discrimination in RH and maternal service provision • providers might not respect their right to intimacy, to love and to have children • Those who desire to have children have additional need for PMTCT services

  4. New studies highlight new needs… • New studies among adolescents 15-19 years perinatally infected with HIV highlight new needs • Uganda, 2007: 732 adolescents (64% female) • Kenya, 2009: 289 adolescents (66% female) • Objectives of the studies • Assess SRH needs of these adolescents • Identify interventions that integrate these needs within existing HIV/AIDS programs

  5. Methodology • Participants identified through existing HIV/AIDS programs and over 90% receiving ART • Information from interviews, FGDs and IDIs: • access to SRH information and support services • sexual and RH experiences and intentions • use of maternal health services (Kenya only) • issues of self-esteem, worries and fears in life

  6. Desire to Love and be Loved37% in Uganda and 69% in Kenya have ever dated and see no reason not to ….

  7. HIV+ adolescents are sexually active, yet have low contraceptive use….

  8. High pregnancy rates, many unintended…

  9. Maternal health services

  10. Use of some maternal services still low, including PMTCT

  11. Surviving children…..

  12. 21% of infants tested are HIV-positive ….

  13. …and infants whose mothers did not receive PMTCT are significantly more likely to be HIV+

  14. Opportunities for integration • Most HIV+ adolescents are on ART and visit clinics regularly -- opportunity to systematically screen for SRH information and service needs Potential Impact • Expanding access to contraceptive information and services to sexually active HIV+ adolescents • Early identification of pregnant HIV+ adolescents and increased use of MCH services

  15. The challenge is how to get counselors to respect SRHR of HIV+ adolescents …. • Counseling not responsive to needs • Often talking to them and not discussing their feelings • No comprehensive sexuality education…information is censored, with warnings against sex and relationships • Sometimes providers talk only to parents/guardians • Counseling only focuses on responsibilities and not their rights and lives • Many adolescents are hesitant to discuss their sexual behavior with service providers

  16. Tools for integration • ‘Fertility and sexuality desire’ assessment tool for counselors to systematically screen and refer young people appropriately • Counselor’s guidelines on SRH and rights of adolescents living with HIV

  17. Programmatic Opportunities • Strengthening adolescent preventive information and services within ART programs • Establishing transition clinics - bridge between pediatric and adult care for adolescents • Creating effective linkages between HIV/AIDS centers and MCH clinics • Sensitizing service providers on needs of HIV+ adolescents -- not different from any girl or boy

  18. Acknowledgements • Funding agencies: Ford Foundation USAID • Partners: TASO- Uganda APHIA II partners in Kenya NASCOP and DRH

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