Filipino Women and HIV 03/25/2010
![]() Last November, the World Health Organization issued a statement that Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) has become the leading cause of death for women ages 15-44 around the world. This means that, due largely to having unsafe sex, women of childbearing age are putting themselves at risk of contracting the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV). This also implies that women today may still not yet be in full control of their fertility and reproductive health. The present scenario Many are still quick to dismiss HIV as a gay or sex worker disease. And then came the news of HIV cases rising in the call center industry. Call center agents were offended but the news also prompted AKMA-PTM, a call center party list, to come up with an HIV hotline for the 500,000-plus people working for Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) companies in the country. The hotline may prove beneficial but the way this new development was reported irked some people with HIV who are working for better awareness and support for all since people are now thinking that if they are not gay and don’t work for call centers, they will be immune. Campaigns to pass the Reproductive Health Bill and have it implemented as well as other awareness drives spearheaded by the DOH and various NGOs are all good and does benefit a lot of people. There is room for improvement, however, in the approach and the ad campaigns. More resources also have to be allocated to provide the necessary facilities for testing and cooperation from different communities will be critical in helping curb the HIV situation in the country. The need for a different approach Dr. Patricia Gay, in her speech at the National Conference on Women and HIV/AIDS, encourages people working on HIV/AIDS awareness to look at HIV/AIDS as a sexual and relational issue and not just as a health issue. Lisa Enriquez, one of the few women with HIV who have come out, was neither a sex worker nor a drug addict. In fact, she got HIV from her Italian husband. This raises the question as to who shall give a face to the many other women who are getting the virus, not because they were particularly promiscuous, but because they were in a relationship they thought was monogamous. There may be some truth to the news being reported that Filipinos keep having unprotected sex but it does not say how much of these happen casually or how some HIV-carriers may be unwittingly passing the virus on to multiple partners. Consider the following scenarios and facts:
OFWs engaging in sexual relationships abroad may also have more to do with loneliness from being away from loved ones for long periods of time rather than immorality. Thus, awareness campaigns have to start appealing to these emotional and relational aspects of the Filipino’s sexual practices for them to be more effective. The female perspective The Department of Health (DOH) pegs the HIV/AIDS situation in the Philippines as an epidemic, with January 2010 registering the highest number of HIV cases. An alarming 50 out of the 143 cases reported last January were HIV transmissions from sharing needles from drug use while 89 of the cases were from sexual contact. 18 out of the cases were female. Aside from the critical issue of having a body that will not be able to fight opportunistic infections, there are other issues that are particular to women with HIV that need to be addressed, and maybe differently. These include, but are not limited to, the following:
A lot is already being done to promote HIV awareness but information drives have to compete with the changing mores of the present time. We have to adjust accordingly. Not doing so may mean that it will be our sons and daughters someday who are stricken with the disease. Already, the young professionals most at risk of getting HIV are also the ones driving our economy, the implication of which spells disaster for the Filipino nation. Add Comment |