September - 2006
Conference puts spotlight on AIDS epidemic
Cheryl Petten, Toronto
Since it was first identified 25 years ago, acquired immune deficiency
syndrome, or AIDS, has claimed the lives of around 25 million
people worldwide. Each day, an estimated 8,000 people are added
to the list of the dead.
From Aug. 13 to 18, scientists, educators, policy makers, service
organizers, community leaders and people living with AIDS and
the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV, the virus that causes
AIDS) from around the world came together in Toronto to take
part in the 16th International AIDS Conference. Held every two
years, the conference provides a forum for sharing information
about HIV/AIDS and what is being done to address this global
pandemic.Kevin Barlow was one of the participants attending the
conference. As executive director of the Canadian Aboriginal
AIDS Network Inc. (CAAN), one of the reasons Barlow took part
in the conference was to remind policy-makers that the
AIDS epidemic isn't just happening in third-world countries,
it's happening in this country as well.
"It's important to look at issues like Africa and what's
going on in developing countries, but you know, one of the messages
we wanted to drive home was that here within Canada we still
have an epidemic that's not under control yet, certainly in the
Aboriginal population," he said.
The rate of HIV/AIDS infection among Aboriginal people in
Canada is estimated to be three times higher than among the general
population. It's also estimated that, on average, one more Aboriginal
person becomes infected each and every day.
Current estimates put the number of Aboriginal people in Canada
infected with HIV/AIDS at somewhere between 3,000 and 5,000,
Barlow said. One reason for the huge range is that provinces
like Ontario and Quebec don't collect ethnic information on HIV
positive test reports. Another is that fewer Aboriginal people
are getting tested.
One of the factors contributing to the high infection rate among
Aboriginal people in Canada is that, until recently, very little
in the way of government funding for AIDS organizations was making
its way to the Aboriginal community."In other words, when
you don't invest in prevention work, then you get
infections," Barlow said. "We were sounding these alarms
years ago but there was no response. And then, finally, once
they started seeing the numbers, that's when they started making
changes."Even now, the funding that is received for HIV/AIDS
programs within the
Aboriginal community is tenuous, at best. Barlow pointed to two
Aboriginal AIDS service organizations in Manitoba that had to
close their doors recently when the federal Conservative government
cut their funding.
"So here we are, listed as one of the target populations
in the HIV/AIDS strategy, but yet we're facing closure of some
of our member groups. So obviously we're getting mixed messages
from the government on whether we're a priority or not,"
Kevin Barlow said.
The high infection rate among Aboriginal people is also a result
of the social and economic problems that exist within many Indigenous
communities.
"Basically those determinants of health that are compromised
in the Aboriginal community, like lower education levels, housing
issues, social factors and influences like residential schooling,"
Barlow said. "And so that's why some people, when they experience
really traumatic events like physical and sexual abuse in residential
schools, they grow up to be wounded people and sometimes turn
to alcohol and drugs to cope."
Injecting drug use accounts for about two-thirds of new HIV infections,
largely because of the practice of needle sharing, Barlow said.
"If one person is positive and they share that needle with
three, four or five people, then the numbers grow that rapidly."
Barlow took part in the conference as a way to get information
out to people working in HIV/AIDS organizations across the country
about what's being done to prevent infection and support people
with HIV/AIDS within the Aboriginal community.
Taking part in an international conference means that this sharing
of information can go beyond borders, letting Indigenous people
from across the globe benefit from the experiences of organizations
in Canada, while organizations here can benefit from lessons
learned in other countries.Canada isn't alone when it comes to
having a disproportionate number of its Aboriginal people infected
with HIV/AIDS. The situation is similar in a countries across
the globe. A number of conference sessions were dedicated to
discussion of the HIV/AIDS epidemic within Indigenous populations,
with presenters from a number of countries including Canada,
the United States, Mexico, Guatemala, Bolivia, Chad, India, Australia
and New Zealand.
"I think we do well to bring our people together and to
support one another and toshare resources," Barlow said.
"There's very strong similarities in how there's disproportionate
numbers, there's lower socio-economic status, there's dispossessed
individuals ... so there were a lot of commonalties."
With the 2006 International AIDS Conference come and gone,
CAAN is beginning preparations for the next conference in Mexico
in 2008.
"Our organization has formed an international Indigenous
HIV/AIDS secretariat and we're going to be working to make sure
that in future international conferences Indigenous issues are
at the forefront and that we continue to be on the agenda."
For more on the 2006 International AIDS Conference, visit www.aids2006.org.
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