July 18, 2005
HIV-positive women and children in Russia often face widespread discrimination and abuse, even from health care professionals, according to a Human Rights Watch report released on Friday, BBC News reports. "The stigma of HIV/AIDS is with them everywhere: in the workplace, at school, at the neighborhood clinic, even in their own homes," HRW Children's Rights Director Lois Whitman said (BBC News, 7/15). Many HIV-positive women experience verbal abuse from health care providers and some are denied treatment, according to the 41-page report, titled "Positively Abandoned: Stigma and Discrimination Against HIV-Positive Mothers and Their Children in Russia" (HRW release, 7/15). HIV-positive infants who are abandoned at birth are segregated in orphanages or hospital wards because people are afraid of coming into contact with them, the AP/Mainichi Daily News reports. HRW criticized the Russian government for failing to implement standards to protect HIV-positive women and children and inadequately addressing the epidemic in the country. HRW urged Russian President Vladimir Putin to help reduce HIV/AIDS-related stigma and discrimination and promote public awareness of the disease. The report also recommended that the country's health ministry end the segregation of HIV-positive infants and improve training for medical and child care workers (AP/Mainichi Daily News, 7/15). Russia has registered 307,000 HIV cases, but HIV/AIDS experts estimate more than one million HIV-positive people live in Russia and as many as one million Russians could die of AIDS-related causes by 2008 (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 7/5).
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Reprinted with permission from kaisernetwork.org. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, search the archives, or sign up for email delivery at www.kaisernetwork.org/dailyreports/hiv. The Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report is published for kaisernetwork.org, a free service of the Kaiser Family Foundation, by The Advisory Board Company. © 2004 by The Advisory Board Company and Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.