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Press-Release
Press-Release
Kiev, Ukraine, 19 March 2001 - Today, the international medical aid agency
Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) launches a mass media campaign in Ukraine aimed
at tackling the stigmatisation and discrimination directed at the large number
of people living with HIV/AIDS.
In 1995, there were 250 cases of HIV/AIDS in Ukraine. Today, six years later,
there are more than a quarter of a million HIV-infected cases (UNAIDS) - more
than in any other CIS country. The epidemic has now spread beyond the original
small high-risk group of the population, which included drug users and sexworkers,
into the wider community. Yet, discrimination and stigmatisation towards people
living with HIV/AIDS are still firmly embedded in public attitudes and within
the medical profession.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, financial resources decreased and the
quality of healthcare in Ukraine deteriorated. Information on new medical issues,
including HIV/AIDS infection, transmission, treatment and prevention were limited.
MSF surveys in Ukraine have shown that this lack of knowledge and general misinformation
on HIV/AIDS, are contributing to the stigmatisation of people living with HIV/AIDS.
In Odessa, Natasha, 23, has been living with HIV for over three years. Her
experience is that people tend to believe that anyone with HIV is a "bad
person," and that only people from high-risk groups become infected. "What
most people don't know is that HIV-positive people lead absolutely normal lives,"
says Natasha. "We study, we work and we get married, just like everyone
else."
Many people with HIV/AIDS are rejected by their friends and families, fired
from their jobs and relocated from their houses. Some medical workers also mistreat
or even refuse to treat people with HIV/AIDS.
A mass media campaign was developed from the results of the MSF research. Through
television and radio commercials, distribution of leaflets and posters, advertisements
and a website, the campaign aims to inform people of the facts about HIV and
AIDS to reduce misconceptions.
By using personal stories and experiences of people who have been in contact
with people living with HIV/AIDS, the MSF campaign aims to help people to deal
with their emotions when confronting similar situations. Ultimately, the purpose
is to create more tolerance towards people with HIV/AIDS. The campaign will
commence on March 20 in Kiev and maybe extended to other regions later.
MSF has been developing and implementing HIV/AIDS projects in collaboration
with the Ministry of Health, universities and NGOs in Ukraine since 1999. Besides
the media campaign, MSF is running a harm-reduction project, information centres
for medical workers and an AIDS care and support programme in the south of Ukraine.
Medecins Sans Frontieres works in over 80 countries worldwide. MSF is committed
to two objectives: providing medical care regardless of race, religion, politics
or gender and raising awareness of humanitarian crisis situations. MSF programmes
are mainly funded by private donations to guarantee the independence; other
funding sources include various international organisations and governments.
MSF was awarded the 1999 Noble Peace Prize.
Please contact: Prem Abramova - Campaign Coordinator
Kate Mallinson - Press Officer
MSF-UKRAINE
28a Esplanadna St., 3rd Floor, 01023 Kiev, Ukraine
Telephone +38 044 220 4586/ 6709/7503 - 2273729
E-mail: prem@msf.kiev.ua
Website address: www.msf.org.ua
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