Nepal: Last June, 51-year-old Jalu Nepali, a resident of
The
government has set up anti-retroviral therapy (ART) centres in select medical
facilities to distribute free medicines to HIV patients. In
According
to data from the provincial health directorate, 66 HIV-positive people in the
province died in the course of treatment in the fiscal year 2022-2023.
Similarly, over the past three years, 226 HIV-infected people have died, of
whom 72 were women and 154 men.
This data on the deceased represents the records of only those
who have come in contact with health institutions and were getting treatment,
and the actual number could be much higher, said officials of the directorate.
Manoj
Ojha, public health officer of the directorate, said that Kailali saw the
highest number of HIV-related deaths, which was 32 in the fiscal year 2022–23;
38 in the fiscal year 2021–22; and 22 in the fiscal year 2020–21.
“In
every district of the province, many HIV-positive people die every year, but
the government agencies do not have that data as HIV and sexually transmitted
diseases are still considered taboo in our society,” said Mina BK, an
HIV-positive patient, activist, and president of Bajura Plus, a social
organisation working to make people aware of HIV.
“Some HIV-positive people, especially in remote areas, die by
suicide, go out of contact, and don’t come forward but choose to suffer in
silence because they feel ashamed.”
In
the last fiscal year, 173 new HIV cases were discovered in tests conducted on
7,103 people by several government health institutions, and 81 new cases in
tests carried out by various organisations.
Currently,
3,626 HIV-infected people and their children are taking medicines from the 17
ART centres in the province, said Ojha, public health officer of the
directorate. “Reports of different agencies at the local and district levels
show that most of the 226 HIV patients who died in the past three years were
from working-class families with poor economic backgrounds or were unemployed.”
According
to Dr Sher Bahadur Kamar, superintendent of
“Due
to poor economic conditions, mental illness, and societal pressure, patients
fail to maintain a good diet and sometimes even discontinue the medicines that
are provided free of charge,” said Kamar.
The
National AIDS Strategy 2016–2021 commits to cutting the number of new
infections by 50 percent, new infections among children by 90 percent, and the
AIDS-related mortality rate by 25 percent. It says HIV/AIDS will be eradicated
by 2030, but the number of infected people and the mortality rate are still on
the rise.
“Poverty
is the main obstacle to fighting HIV infection in our conservative society,
where HIV-positive people are treated like untouchables, leaving them
unemployed. The infection would be easier to control if the government helped
them get good jobs and shelter and conducted more effective awareness
programmes,” said BK.
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