World AIDS Day: Nigeria With Second Largest AIDS Cases In The World

In a frightening revelation on Friday at the occasion of the World AIDS Day, Nigeria is ranked as the second largest country with HIV/AIDS pandemic in the world.

It was also revealed that this might not be unconnected with the shortage of testing kits and anti-retroviral drugs in the country.

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Country Director of One Campaign, an international advocacy group, Serah Makka-Ugbabe, who disclosed this in Abuja at a workshop on the role of Primary Healthcare facilities in addressing the HIV/AIDS Epidemic, lamented that most people that were willing to test to know their status often times became disappointed as a result of lack of test kits and the drugs for those that are living with the virus.

She said as a global member based advocacy organisation that get people to join them and advocate for causes, the primary aim of One Campaign was to eliminate poverty and that the organization was looking at the health sector in Nigeria.

“We want to find out what it takes to ensure that every Nigeria that is living with HIV/Aids or that gets the disease is treated. Nigeria has the second largest Aids epidemic in the world and also has the worst treatment in the world.

“When you can have your drugs for HIV/Aids, you reduce your virus load and the disease can become dormant but the problem is that many people don’t get access to the treatment especially those in the rural communities because the primary healthcare is not working.

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“We have to put pressure on the government to make sure that they work so that people can have access to care and treatments because the fewer the people have access, the more it spreads, so it is a danger situation”, she stated.

In the same vein, the Secretary of Primary Healthcare Revitalization Support Group, Dr. John Onyeokoro, said that the government at different levels needed to spend more on health, adding that the one percent care fund which was recently approved for the primary healthcare was not in the budget.

According to him, the “Abuja declaration in 2001 by Heads of States stipulates that the National government spends 15 percent of their budget on health. What we are saying now is that beyond that stipulation, it is also important that when we ask for increased funding, we should be able to demonstrate that the ones they are giving us, we are using them well.

“Our take as civil society is that there should be more accountability in the part of government and on the part of those who are utilising the healthcare services. When you demonstrate that the little they are giving you, you are using it well, you will be given more. I can tell you that there are a lot of wastages in this system. It is that wastage that should not be encouraged.”

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