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HIV/AIDS and Related Diseases – 2 Day training

This course is offered once a month over two days. It empowers delegates to understand HIV/AIDS, Sexually Transmitted Infections and Tuberculosis. Prevention and early detection as well as treatment options such as Antiretroviral Therapy are discussed. This course is particularly useful to persons in managerial or leadership positions who may have to deal with lifestyle related chronic illnesses during their interaction with people in various contexts.

Course benefits include:

  • Improved knowledge and understanding of medical, social, emotional and interpersonal dynamics of HIV/AIDS, STI’s and tuberculosis and how these diseases are interrelated.
  • Practical empowerment to promote primary prevention, early detection and treatment maintenance of the diseases discussed.
  • Ability to design an HIV/AIDS company policy.
  • Attendance certificate

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World AIDS Day

South Africa has joined the rest of the world in marking this year’s World AIDS Day, with an emphasis on the need for access to HIV prevention, treatment and care for all.

President Jacob Zuma, addressing the national commemoration in Pretoria, announced that all babies under one-year with HIV would receive anti-retroviral treatment; expanded treatment for pregnant women to prevent the transmission of HIV to their children and said all patients with both TB and HIV will get treatment with anti-retrovirals if their CD4 count is 350 or less.

Jacob Zuma

President Jacob Zuma

The measures are to come into force in April next year.

On World AIDS Day, various sectors from across the country have committed to rallying behind the fight against the disease.

In his World AIDS Day message, Cape Town Mayor Dan Plato called on every person to do their part to help deal with HIV and AIDS.

Cape Town Mayor Dan Plato

Cape Town Mayor Dan Plato

“Our biggest challenge in responding to HIV and AIDS is the cloud of secrecy and silence that surrounds it, which prevents people from being open about how HIV and AIDS affects them,” he said.

The SA Democratic Teachers Union (Sadtu) called on its members to get tested for HIV. In a statement, the union said as part of efforts to fight the disease it was operating a project to help teachers, orphans and vulnerable children in 20 000 schools across the country.

World AIDS Day

“We realise the importance of individuals taking responsibility for their lives and therefore urge our members to get tested, so that they know their status and take the necessary precautions.”

The National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) urged companies, especially in the mining industry, to take new action to combat new HIV infections.

“The face of the mining industry is fast changing from single sex to communal accommodation and we appeal to companies to take a conscious view of these developments,” it said in a statement.

Minister Aaron Motsoaledi

Minister Aaron Motsoaledi

Trade union federation COSATU has applauded Minister of Health, Aaron Motsoaledi, on the progress he has made to date in fighting the disease. The union encouraged workers, shop stewards and leaders in the labour movement to join the campaign on voluntary HIV counselling and testing on 1 December.

The South African Municipal Workers Union said there had been a ‘wind of change’ in governments responses to the HIV and AIDS crisis.

It said South Africans must take responsibility for themselves, their communities and their workplaces to make HIV and AIDS history.

Source: BuaNews, info.gov.za

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I-Want-U2get-HIV-Test

In a bid to raise awareness around HIV and AIDS, the Health Department plans to encourage South African leaders in various fields to undergo HIV tests in a hope that others will lead by example.

This is according to Minister of Health Aaron Motsoaledi, who presented shocking statistics to the media on Tuesday on the effects of the pandemic.

His presentation followed President Jacob Zuma’s address last month to the National Council of Provinces where he emphasised the need to move with urgency to tackle HIV and AIDS.

Motsoaledi said his department would approach sports, business, entertainment and religious leaders to undergo testing, adding that both the President and the Cabinet had agreed that having a strategy of leading by example was the best way forward.

He believed it was possible to reverse the rate of infections and highlighted the case of the Western Cape which had seen a reduction in the number of early childhood deaths after introducing dual therapy in 2003.

Dr Aaron Motsoaledi

Dr Aaron Motsoaledi

“I still believe South Africans can unite and stand together against this disease,” he said, adding that prevention remained the key focus for government in its fight against the pandemic.

To this end, government was distributing 400 million condoms a year, but this would be massively increased for the 2010 FIFA World Cup, he said.

About one percent of South Africans had Tuberculosis (TB), said Motsoaledi, who pointed out that because 73 percent of those that had the disease were also HIV positive, government was looking at treating HIV and AIDS and TB in the same centre.

The government was also looking at the possibility of procuring more affordable anti-retroviral medicines to treat those infected, he said.

Pravin Gordhan

Pravin Gordhan

Added to this, the Health Department received an additional R900 million for the HIV and AIDS treatment programme by the Minister of Finance Pravin Gordhan in his medium-term budget.

Statistics presented by Motsoaledi revealed among other things that 40 of the country’s 52 district municipalities had average antenatal prevalence rates of over 20 percent, with four district municipalities recording rates of over 40 percent.

The worst affected district municipality is uMgungundlovu in KwaZulu-Natal with an average antenatal prevalence rate of 45.7 percent, with Gert Sibanda the worst affected in Mpumalanga with a rate of 40.5 percent.

Motsoaledi said Mpumalanga and KwaZulu-Natal had the highest average antenatal prevalence rates in women, while the Western Cape, followed by the Northern Cape, had the lowest rate.

A graph presented by Motsoaledi showed how in recent years a massive peak had developed such that by far the majority of deaths now occurred among those aged 25 to 40.

“In any species, death is not supposed to be occurring at the prime of our lives, but it is,” he said.  Just 0.7 percent of the world’s population resided in South Africa, but the country represented 17 percent of all HIV and AIDS cases, or 23 times the global average, he said.

diversity-hands-around-aids-symbol-thumb8596472

Source: BuaNews, info.gov.za

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