WHO
Fact Sheet No 242
June 2000
WOMEN
AND HIV/AIDS
Facts
and figures
- 33.6 million people living
with HIV/AIDS, 14.8 million of whom are women
- 5 million adults newly infected
in 1999, 2.3 million are women
- 2.1 million died of AIDS in
1999, 1.1 million of whom were women
- 12-13 African women currently
infected for every 10 African men
- Half a million infections
in children (under 15), most of which have been transmitted from mother
to child
- 55% of adult infections in
sub-Saharan Africa are in women, 30% in SE Asia, 20% in Europe and USA.
Modes of
transmission
The AIDS epidemic
in women is overwhelmingly heterosexual – almost entirely so in Africa
and South and South East Asia.
In other areas,
a proportion of women are infected through:
- sex with a bisexual or drug
injecting partner
- their own injecting drug use
- heterosexual sex without these
factors
- blood transfusion (in developing
countries where blood is not routinely screened).
Why are
women more vulnerable to HIV infection?
Biologically,
- Larger mucosal surface; microlesions
which can occur during intercourse may be entry points for the virus;
very young women even more vulnerable in this respect.
- More virus in sperm than in
vaginal secretions
- As with STIs, women are at
least four times more vulnerable to infection; the presence of untreated
STIs is a risk factor for HIV.
- Coerced sex increases risk
of microlesions.
Economically
- Financial or material dependence
on men means that women cannot control when, with whom and in what circumstances
they have sex
- Many women have to exchange
sex for material favours, for daily survival. There is formal sex work
but there is also this exchange which in many poor settings, is many
women’s only way of providing for themselves and their children.
Socially
and culturally
- Women are not expected to
discuss or make decisions about sexuality
- They cannot request, let alone
insist on using a condom or any form of protection
- If they refuse sex or request
condom use, they often risk abuse, as there is a suspicion of infidelity
- The many forms of violence
against women mean that sex is often coerced which is itself a risk
factor for HIV infection
- For married and unmarried
men, multiple partners (including sex workers) are culturally accepted
- Women are expected to have
relations with or marry older men, who are more experienced, and more
likely to be infected. Men are seeking younger and younger partners
in order to avoid infection and in the belief that sex with a virgin
cures AIDS and other diseases.
Why
must the response be gender-based?
Three main
reasons:
1. Unequal gender
(social, economic, and power) relations are driving the epidemic
2. Women are disproportionately
affected by the epidemic
- They are highly vulnerable
to infection
- They bear the psychosocial
and physical burden of AIDS care
- They suffer particular discrimination;
are often blamed for spreading infection
3. Sex differences
in pathology. Clinical management, for too long based on research undertaken
on men, must be tailored to women’s particular symptomatology, disease
progression, HIV related illnesses etc.
What
will make a difference?
Physical and material
independence and security for women which is independent of the "protection"
of a man or men
- Women must be empowered so
that they are able to control their own lives and in particular their
sexual relations
This implies a
profound shift in social and economic power relations between men and
women. It cannot be achieved tomorrow but action must start today, through:
- Increased educational and
employment opportunities for girls and women
- Public education campaigns
on the harmful - fatal, in the case of AIDS - effects of unequal gender
relations.
Microbicides:
our best hope
The development
of a prevention method which is cheap, safe and effective and under women’s
control, is essential.
- In the absence of a vaccine,
this is a method likely to have an immediate and significant impact
on the alarming rate of new infections in women.
- A massive investment in international
research and development of a microbicide is required.
- An issue which must be dealt
with is the desire for children. A microbicide for preventing both pregnancy
and STIs including HIV (dual protection), and a microbicide which
is not also a spermicide must be developed.
Proven effective
interventions
There are
a number of proven interventions (see key interventions) which together,
comprise key strategies to control the spread of the epidemic. They are
particularly important for women.
Treatment
and prevention of sexually transmissible infections:
- women are more vulnerable
to STIs; the consequences are more serious
- many STIs are asymptomatic
in women, so go untreated
- syndromic management of STI
in women is more difficult than in men
- stigma associated with STIs
is greater for women (suggests promiscuity), so they are often afraid
or unwilling to seek care.
Safe
blood
Women and
children are the chief recipients of transfusions; women - during and
after delivery. The following action is required:
- Antenatal care and adequate
nutrition to reduce some of the need for transfusion
- Appropriate clinical use of
blood to avoid unnecessary transfusion
- Screening of all blood as
the ultimate aim.
Education
for prevention including the use of condoms
Condoms,
male and female, are currently the only protection methods available.
They need
to be more widely accepted, available and used.
- Education to promote their
use
- Increasing access through
free distribution, subsidies, or social marketing so that they are really
affordable.
It has been shown
that even in the most favourable circumstances, condom use (male and female)
is low. The acceptability of these methods remains problematic. The female
condom is if anything more cumbersome than the male condom and considerably
more expensive. Furthermore, women cannot control their use. Impact will
continue to be low if people’s preferences and therefore their actual
use of methods, are not given due attention.
Women
as carers
- Women are responsible for
the health care of all family members.
- Care is only one of the many
productive and reproductive activities of women which include farming,
food preparation, collection of firewood and water, child care, cleaning,
etc.
- Care is provided free but
has a cost! During illness, women’s productive labour is lost; this
has serious impact on long term wellbeing of the household.
- Care doesn’t end with death
of husband/child/sister. Care of orphans lies with grandmothers and
aunts.
- Women carers are often HIV
positive themselves.
Making
men more responsible
- Little attention has been
paid to men’s participation in efforts to protect women
- Men are hard to reach and
educate but some are concerned about sexual health – their own and their
partners
- Raising awareness of their
own risk has been shown to change certain behaviours
- Interventions must be aimed
at men (as well as at women) if women are to be protected.
For further information, journalists
can contact :
WHO Press Spokesperson and Coordinator, Spokesperson's Office,
WHO HQ, Geneva, Switzerland / Tel
+41 22 791 4458/2599 / Fax +41 22 791 4858 / e-Mail: inf@who.int
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