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PlusNews, the HIV/AIDS channel of the UN's IRIN news service, has launched a new radio page
delivering high-quality audio feature programmes that give a voice to
people and communities on the frontline of the AIDS pandemic. The
ready-to-broadcast MP3 audio files are free to download. They bear
witness to the impact of HIV in southern Africa, particularly on the
region's most vulnerable people: its children and women.
Produced
in partnership with the IFRC, PlusNews Radio reports cover key issues
in prevention, treatment and care from Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia,
South Africa and Zimbabwe.
Antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) can help
prolong the lives of people who are HIV-positive, but they should go
hand-in-hand with prevention measures to guard against infection in the
first place. PlusNews talks to young people in Botswana, which has one
of the world's highest prevalence rates. Memory work has traditionally
been associated with death: a way for HIV-positive people to say
goodbye and leave a legacy for their children and family. But this
innovative form of psychosocial support is evolving, and now also
caters for HIV-positive people accessing life-prolonging treatment, as
well as orphans and vulnerable children.
An estimated 18,000 children in the tiny mountain kingdom of Lesotho
are HIV-positive, but only 1,000 are accessing ARV drugs that can
prolong their lives. The survival prospects for those not on treatment
are bleak. PlusNews looks at the challenges of rolling out ARVs. The
death of a parent turns a child's life upside down, but when AIDS is
the cause, the tragedy is magnified. Unlike other illnesses, there is a
strong likelihood the second parent will also succumb to debilitating
sickness and die. Every Friday, two dozen home-based care volunteers
meet at the Red Cross office in Soweto, Johannesburg, and belt out
harmonies that wake up the quiet side street. Singing in the choir is a
way of de-stressing and rejuvenating after a hard week of tending to
the sick.
Access PLUSNEWS RADIO here!
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