AEGiS-UNAIDS: UNAIDS Executive Director, Yao Ming and Government launch campaign against discrimination in China UNAIDSImportant note: Information in this article was accurate in 2009. The state of the art may have changed since the publication date.
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UNAIDS Executive Director, Yao Ming and Government launch campaign against discrimination in China

UNAIDS - 27 November 2009


UNAIDS Executive Director Michel Sidibe and the Chinese Vice-Minister of Health, Huang Jiefu, launched a campaign in Beijing earlier today to address HIV-related stigma and discrimination. Chinese basketball star Yao Ming and a group of fans that include people living with HIV are the face of the campaign which features two videos and a poster.

Congratulating Mr Ming on his commitment to spread awareness about HIV, Mr Sidibe said, "It is an inspiration to have celebrity as famous as Yao Ming take a leadership role in addressing this issue. I hope others will follow his excellent example."

In the campaign, Yao Ming is encouraging people in China and all over the world to help change attitudes and stop stigma and discrimination, "Like all of us, my friends who are living with HIV should have the opportunity to live full and dignified lives."

Members from organizations of people living with HIV and other partners were also part of the launch ceremony.

The campaign responds to findings from a recently launched China Stigma Index report that measures stigma and discrimination experienced by people living with HIV in China. The report has surveyed more than 2000 respondents living with HIV.

The study shows that 42% of respondents reported having faced some type of HIV-related discrimination. It also showed that 12% of respondents said they had been refused medical care at least once since they tested positive.

Dr Jiefu commented, "China has always made anti-discrimination education an important part of its response to AIDS. The Chinese government is committed to continuing to work together with the international community, including UNAIDS, and to doing more to eliminate discrimination."

Many of the surveyed respondents said they had been refused antiretroviral treatment, refused family planning services and reproductive health services since being diagnosed HIV positive. 17% said they had been recommended by a health professional not to have children and some had been pressurised into undergoing sterilization by a healthcare professional. Some of the female respondents said they had been pressurised into terminating a pregnancy by medical staff or family planning department staff.

The China Stigma Index survey also found that one quarter of medical staff and more than one third of government officials and teachers develop more negative and discriminatory attitudes towards people living with HIV after learning of their HIV positive status.

A significant proportion of people living with HIV reported having lost their job, having been forced to leave school or move out of their home or even having found that their family members experienced discrimination in various forms, as a result of their HIV status.

China, together with India, Thailand, Indonesia, Cambodia and Papua New Guinea, is home to 82% of people living with HIV in the Asia-Pacific region.

HIV remains a formidable challenge in China with several factors fuelling the epidemic, including shame, fear, stigma and discrimination; low awareness of HIV within the general population; rural poverty; mobility; availability and affordability of prostitution; a rapidly expanding community of men who have sex with men; and injecting drug use.

Resources:

Related information:

Stigma and discrimination - http://www.unaids.org/en/PolicyAndPractice/StigmaDiscrim/

Feature stories:

Michel Sidibe commends China's progress in AIDS response - http://www.aegis.org/news/unaids/2009/UN091124.html

People Living with HIV Stigma Index - http://www.aegis.org/news/unaids/2008/UN080818.html

Publications:

The China Stigma Index Report - http://data.unaids.org/pub/Report/2009/20091127_stigmaindexsummar yreport_en.pdf

Reducing HIV stigma and discrimination: a critical part of national AIDS programmes - a resource for national stakeholders in the HIV response - http://data.unaids.org/pub/Report/2008/jc1521_stigmatisation_en.p df


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