HIV advice for women
WOMEN AND HIV
Significance Of HIV And Women? In the United
States the number of reported cases of AIDS in women increased steadily
from 1985 to 2002. It is now estimated that 53% of women are infected
through heterosexual relationships. About 29 % of women are infected with
AIDS through drug use. The highest rates of AIDS among women are found in
the Southeast and the Northeast United States.
What Do Women Need
to Know About HIV? Women are at risk for HIV infection. Many women think
AIDS is a disease of gay men. But women get HIV from sharing needles and
from heterosexual sex.
During sex, HIV is transmitted from men to
women much more easily than from women to men. A woman's risk of infection
is higher with anal intercourse, or if she has a vaginal disease. The risk
of infection is higher if your sex partner is or was an injection drug
user, has other sex partners, has had sex with infected people, or has sex
with men.
Women should protect themselves against HIV infection.
Having male sex partners use a condom every time or reduce the number of
sex partners to just one can lower the chance of HIV infection. Female
condoms provide some protection, but not as much as a male condom. Other
forms of birth control, such as birth control pills, diaphragms, or
implants do not provide protection against HIV. There is not yet any cream
or gel that women can use to prevent HIV infection (microbicide). However,
many scientists are working to develop one.
Get tested if you
think you were exposed to HIV. Many women don't find out they have HIV
until they become ill or get tested during pregnancy. If women don't get
tested for HIV, they seem to get sick and die faster than men. But if they
get tested and treated, they live as long as men. Viral loads are lower in
women. Women tend to have lower viral loads during the first few years of
HIV infection. Treatment guidelines suggest considering this for recently
infected women with T-cell counts over 350. However, HIV disease proceeds
at the same rate as for men. Gynecological problems can be early signs of
HIV infection. Ulcers in the vagina, persistent yeast infections and
severe pelvic inflammatory disease can be signs of HIV. Hormone changes,
birth control pills, or antibiotics can also cause these vaginal problems.
See your doctor to make sure you know the cause. Women get more and
different side effects than men. Women are more likely to get skin rashes
and liver problems and to experience body shape changes (lipodystrophy),
than men. They also have more problems caused by human papillomavirus or H
PV. Many women are full-time parents in addition to dealing with their
health and employment. This can make it more difficult to take medications
and schedule medical appointments. With proper support, however, women do
very well on HIV treatment.
Women Infected With HIV And HIV
Research Women have been under-represented in most medical research
including HIV/AIDS. Most medications have never been specifically tested
in women. In 1997 the United States Food and Drug Administration said that
more women should be allowed and encouraged to participate in clinical
trials. Pregnancy should not be used as a limiting criterion to keep women
out of HIV/AIDS research. At present the proportion of women in HIV/AIDS
research studies is increasing but is still quite low.
In the
early 1990s, two research projects started to study women living with
HIV/AIDS from six inner cities in the United States. These research
projects included: (1) The Women's Interagency HIV Study (WIHS) recruited
2066 HIV-positive and 575 HIV-negative women; and (2) The Women and
Infants Transmission Studies (WITS) enrolled HIV-infected pregnant women
and their children. More studies of women with HIV are underway.
Pharmaceutical companies are trying to enroll more women into their
clinical trials.
Treatment For Women Women with HIV should be
treated by medical practitioners who have a thorough understand of HIV
disease and its management for women. Medical practitioners should be
aware of the following:
Women get vaginal infections, genital
ulcers, pelvic inflammatory disease and genital warts more often and in
most cases more severely than uninfected women.
Only 1 woman gets
Kaposi's sarcoma, a skin cancer, for every 8 men who get it.
Women
get thrush, a fungal infection, in their throats and herpes, a virus that
causes cold sores and genital herpes about 30% more often than men.
Women are much more likely than men to get a severe rash when
using nevirapine.
Women with fat redistribution on lipodystrophy
are more likely than men to accumulate fat in the abdomen or breast areas
and are less likely to loose fat in the arms or legs.
Unusual
growths related to cervical cancer are more frequent and more severe in
women who are HIV-positive. More women are becoming infected with
HIV/AIDS. Early testing and treatment, women with HIV can live as long as
men. Women need to know more about how they can be infected, and should
get tested for HIV if they think there is any chance they have been
exposed.
This is especially true for pregnant women. If they test
positive for HIV, they can take steps to reduce the risk of infecting
their babies.
The best way to prevent infection in heterosexual
sex is with the male condom. Other birth control methods do not adequately
protect against HIV. Women who use intravenous drugs should not share
equipment.
Women should discuss vaginal problems with their
doctor, especially yeast infections that don't go away or vaginal ulcers
or sores. These could be signs of HIV infection.
Tailoring HIV
Prevention Programmes to Fit Your Needs As community-based organizations
seek to reduce the number of new HIV infections, it is important to tailor
standardized prevention messages and specifically address communities
considered hard to reach. Women respond to unique social, economic and
political pressures that must be incorporated into HIV prevention
programmes. Every approach may be different, but encouraging dialogue
between community-based organizations, policy makers and clients will go a
long way to reducing HIV infections in increasingly diverse communities.
The challenge of meeting the constant demand for new, innovative
and successful HIV prevention strategies can only be addressed through the
development of additional HIV prevention models for diverse communities.
What Works In HIV Prevention? Several models have been developed
with the hope of expanding or enhancing HIV/AIDS strategies. This is by no
means a comprehensive list of programmes, but rather innovative approaches
that may be useful in the prevention of HIV.
Peer Education And
Outreach Model Peer education and outreach programmes have long been the
main components of HIV prevention efforts. The prevention model
incorporates a number of traditional behavioural theories and models which
emphasize the importance of peer groups and role modelling.
Comprehensive Women's Health Promotion Model This model focuses on
individual risk and behavior change and incorporates broader health and
social themes and provides support above and beyond the delivery of HIV
prevention information. The model focuses on overall health and wellness
and attempts to mitigate some of the "extra-individual" factors that make
protection against HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases difficult
for women. These factors include: the fact that women are often
underinsured compared to their male counterparts and that their caregiver
responsibilities may make access to health services and information more
difficult. Multifaceted Empowerment Model This model expands the
traditional notion of HIV prevention to incorporate a number of
"extra-individual" factors that affect the lives of women, although it
does not include direct medical services. By focusing on issues beyond
HIV, this model enables women to address the social factors that may cause
them to face competing demands that affect their attempts to minimize HIV
risk behaviors. Individual feelings of powerlessness in relationships are
addressed, but overall leadership, involvement and activism are encouraged
to reinforce individual behaviour change. This programme empowers women as
architects of their own solutions rather than passive gatherers of
information.
Cultural Affirmation Model This is a comprehensive
model that focuses exclusively on women: HIV infection is viewed in a
larger context to encourage individuals to change their own behaviour and
to become active in improving their local environment. The cultural
affirmation model is empowering through positive reinforcement, rather
than focusing on risk behaviour and implicitly assigning blame for poor
health. This model incorporates race and ethnicity in HIV prevention
because these factors are relevant to everyday life. Targeting both men
and women in HIV prevention efforts promotes the idea that men and women
share responsibility for protection against HIV infection. While drawing
upon common bonds among women, the model also emphasizes the diversity
within the community. Open dialogue increases everyone's comfort level and
makes HIV prevention more manageable for both men and women.
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women's realities in HIV prevention. American Psychologist, 50, 437-447.
Cash, K. (1996). Women Educating Women About HIV Prevention, Women's
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an understanding of risk behavior: An AIDS risk reduction model. Health
Education Quarterly, 17, 53-72. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention. (2000). HIV/AIDS Surveillance Report. Midyear edition 12(1).
DiClemente, R. and Wingood, G. (1995). A randomized controlled trial of
HIV sexual risk-reduction intervention for young African-American women.
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Smith, D., Moore, J., and Holmberg, S. (2001). HIV infection in women in
the United States: Status at the millennium. Journal of the American
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visibilities in black women's AIDS narratives. Gendered Epidemic:
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Neal, J., Fleming, P., Green, T., Ward, J. (1997). Trends in
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Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, 14. 465-474. Ogur, B. (1996).
Smothering stereotypes: HIV-positive women (pp. 137-152). In Hewitt, N.,
O'Barr, J. and Pesbaugh, N. (Eds.) Talking Gender: Public Images, Personal
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About the Author Dr Pattron is a Public Health Scientist in
the Ministry of Health, Trinidad.
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