HIV/Aids Prevention gives different face to SA Health system

JOHANNESBURG – South Africa is widely-known for its red-tape, especially with its general treatment of African migrants trying to formalise their stay. For those with no legal travel documents, the police, refugee reception officials, justice system and even hospitals, can be very brutal. But when it comes to the roll-out of HIV/Aids prevention programmes, the stringent laws seemingly have some bounds.

wordle-finalnewsFrom a select number of previous stories, South African maternity clinics can be inhumane towards migrant women and the nurses can be merciless towards such clients, yet those health institutions administering especially Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision have managed to attach a human face to this otherwise anti-migrant set-up.
A brief study by this reporter recently showed that VMMC – one of the most cost-effective and yet still one of the most reliable ways of preventing the AIDS scourge (can prevent female-male transmission of HIV by up to 60 per cent) is – unlike other free basic services, highly-inclusive of even those migrants who lack proper documentation, and that those who haven’t done it yet cannot be victims of a brutal system.
We include all foreigners in our services and you do not have to be a South African Citizen to obtain the free service.  We do however need some form of age verification as we are not allowed to perform VMMC on men younger then the age of 10.  We have not worked with specific organisations, but we include communities where mostly foreigners live in our outreach.
Johannesburg-based Bongiwe Klaas of the Centre for HIV/Aids Prevention Studies (CHAPS) confirms – albeit without specific figures, that SA’s HIV prevention measures know no nationality.
“We do not have data on this as we do not record if a patient is a SA citizen.  Anecdotally, we know that in communities where there are large numbers of foreigners our outreach activities are quite successful,” says Klass. CHAPS – a South African public benefit organisation, is a leader of one of the largest VMMC scale-up programmes on the African continent.
According to its website, the organisation takes pride in its pioneering work in VMMC Service Delivery, VMMC Training, HIV Research and VMMC Start-Up Technical Assistance. It is not recorded how many migrants have undergone VMMC procedure in South Africa, but Klass says that is mainly because service providers do not discriminate and therefore, do not have a separate register for migrants and locals.
“We include all foreigners in our services and you do not have to be a South African citizen to obtain the free service.  We do however, need some form of age verification as we are not allowed to perform VMMC on men younger then the age of 10 years.  We have not worked with specific organisations, but we include communities where mostly foreigners live in our outreach.” Gabriel Philip Sibanda is one of those migrants who underwent a VMMC operation in South Africa a few weeks ago. “I was referred by a friend and fellow Zimbabwean who did the operation before me,” says Sibanda, who holds an asylum seeker permit.
“I had initially been hesitant of going there, thinking I would be putting myself in the trouble I went through when I applied for my asylum seeker permit, but the friend, who does not have documentation, told me that the situation was different and that operation was not as painful as I had thought, so I decided to do it in late May.” The warm reception that Sibanda and three colleagues he went with got when they did the operation at Hillbrow “General” Hospital was overwhelming. “It gave me a different feel of the South African health system. Everyone there was friendly and handled both South Africans and foreigners with warm hands. If it was possible, I would do that every year,” he quips.
“The pre and post-operation counselling was a highlight as officials told us that all they cared about was protecting us from the killer disease, yet stating clearly that this did not mean we should be reckless afterwards, as it was still possible to get HIV even after the operation. “I will not throw my life on the line by risking, but I am personally glad that I have done it. I have successfully referred five more Zimbabwean friends and they all speak highly of the reception they got.”
Another Zimbabwean, Prisca Ndlovu, whose 13-year-old son was clinically circumcised in early June, also spoke highly of the system. Klass says age is a problem when it comes to dealing with migrants though. “The biggest drawback is the age verification.  We do know that foreigners are often suspicious of coming to the clinics, but we do our best to overcome this and I am sure it’s the same for the other NGOs performing VMMC. We are all under pressure to perform the maximum number of VMMCs we can per month,” adds Klass.
“We need some form of documentation to verify the age, but people are suspicious and careful not to show identification in fear of being exposed.  Our Outreach staff, nurses and Doctors are trained to make sure that they make all patients feel safe and cared for, especially to make foreigners feel that we won’t expose them.  But of course some suspicions will remain.”
South Africa is one of the 14 countries in Southern and Eastern Africa that have initiated programmes to expand the provision of male circumcision, following UNAIDS’ 2009 recommendations of VMMC as a key component of HIV prevention in countries with high HIV prevalence and low levels of male circumcision.
Other such countries are Botswana, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Rwanda, Swaziland, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe. CHAPS has been central to the roll-out of VMMC in South Africa. In 2010, following successful VMMC trials, the organisation was established in Orange Farm, a migrant-laden township outside Johannesburg, to contribute to the roll-out of South Africa’s national VMMC programme.
However, because the SA healthcare system was still struggling to cope with the rapid expansion of antiretroviral treatment and a chronic shortage of health workers, CHAPS and the National Department of Health selected private sector clinics in high priority areas and trained private providers to deliver free VMMC.
Between 2012 and 2015, CHAPS trained and partnered with 12 private practitioners and about 250,000 circumcisions were performed by CHAPS, with private practitioners accounting for close to 60,000 of that total.

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