Stigma - a social brand that marks disgrace, humiliation and rejection - remains the the most ineluctable, indefinable, intractable problem in the epidemic. Stigma is perhaps the greatest dread of those who live with AIDS and HIV - greater to many even than the fear of a disfiguring, agonizing and protracted death.
Edwin Cameron, Witness to AIDS
Source: Grmek 1995; Becker and Denis 2006
Source: 2011 UNAIDS Report/amFAR
Source: 2011 UNAIDS Report/amFAR
Source: 2011 UNAIDS Report/amFAR
Total: 6.1 million (17.9%)
Women (15-49): 56%
2012: 2.5m orphans currently living in SA
NOTE: All figures are estimated.
Source: Department of Health (Pretoria: 2000)
May 1991
We have a noble task ahead of us—reconstruction of our country. We cannot afford to allow the AIDS epidemic to ruin the realization of our dreams.
Legacy of apartheid-era health policies
Legacy of apartheid-era health policies
Fragmented & sporadic efforts from anti-apartheid coalition
Legacy of apartheid-era health policies
Fragmented & sporadic efforts from anti-apartheid coalition
Government had no legitimacy & little capability to deal with epidemic
Legacy of apartheid-era health policies
Fragmented & sporadic efforts from anti-apartheid coalition
Government had no legitimacy & little capability to deal with epidemic
Housing, unemployment, poverty, violence trumped AIDS as major concern
AIDS “almost a laughing matter. It’s a case of eat, drink and be merry, for tomorrow we die.”
I knew the conditions were right for the AIDS epidemic to happen...We had this low-grade civil war going on in KwaZulu-Natal between the two political parties, the Inkatha Freedom Party and the ANC. It disrupted community life terribly, so people didn't have any hope. I am sure there was a lot of sexual activity going on, because people didn't work about tomorrow. There was no knowing when someone was going to come and shoot you. People just got on with their lives and enjoyed themselves while they could. And a lot of taboos in society broke down.
Dr. James Muller, Edendale Hospital
The tragedy is that HIV/AIDS is not going to succumb to the machinations of the profiteering pharmaceutical companies and their propagandists. Like the marauders of the military industrial complex who propagated fear to increase their profits, the profit-takers who are benefiting from the scourge of HIV/AIDS will disappear to the affluent beaches of the world to enjoy wealth accumulated from a humankind ravaged by a dreaded disease.
Parks Mankahlana
President Mbeki’s spokesperson
(March 2000)
Minister of Health (until 2008)
"...we must remember that ARVs are not a cure and they do have side-effects.”
Minister of Health (until 2008)
"...we must remember that ARVs are not a cure and they do have side-effects.”
She said at the time (2004) that garlic, lemon, olive oil and beetroot "are absolutely critical—first of all to have a beautiful face and beautiful skin—but they also protect you from disease.”
Definition:
Politically and/or socially directed collectives, often involving multiple organizations and networks, focused on changing one or more elements of the social, political, and economic system within which they are located.
Ballard, Habib, and Valoodia (2006)
http://www.tac.org.za
http://www.tac.org.za
“The most important dissident in the country since Nelson Mandela”
(S. Power 2003)
Achmat went on world’s first drug strike in 1999.
Achmat went on world’s first drug strike in 1999.
I will not take expensive treatment until all ordinary South Africans can get it on the public health system. That probably means I will die a horrible death, even though medical science has made it unnecessary.
Zackie Achmat
27. Health care, food, water and social security
1. Everyone has the right to have access to:
3. No one may be refused emergency medical treatment.
Struggles to provide people with access to treatment for a deadly disease, but also seeks to transform members into active citizens & empower them.
The difficult decision for me was not to take off my suit and go to the streets to fight for treatment. That was easy. The emotionally torturous thing for me to do was to recognize we had to take on the ANC. Our ANC.
July 27, 2002: Nelson Mandela visited TAC chair Zackie Achmat at Achmat's house in Muizenberg, Cape Town. Mandela promised to take the treatment issue up with Government and praised Achmat as a role model. (“The Coronation.”)
SA President Jacob Zuma
(since May 2009)
Medical Male Circumcision in KwaZulu-Natal
Medical Male Circumcision in KwaZulu-Natal
Lingering discontent with government responses
to HIV/AIDS and TB