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HIV patients with social protection stay in jobs longer: ILO

HIV patients with social protection stay in jobs longer: ILO

by The Daily Eye Team July 2 2014, 7:04 am Estimated Reading Time: 0 mins, 55 secs

New report calls for wider social protection net to include HIV patients HIV patients with access to social protection are more likely to have jobs or be involved in some productive activity. But majority of the vulnerable sections do not have access to social protection programmes, says a report by the International Labour Organization (ILO) Access to and effects of social protection on workers living with HIV and their households draws its conclusions from research conducted in Guatemala, Indonesia, Rwanda and Ukraine.

The four countries are in the UNAIDS list of high HIV impact countries and are currently developing their social security systems. The report suggests that social protection programmes can reduce the structural barriers that make people vulnerable to HIV. In the studied countries, between 63 per cent and 95 per cent of HIV partients with access to social protection were able to keep their jobs or some form of productive activity. At the same time, 49 per cent to 99 per cent said that their children remained in school and 72 per cent to 86 per cent were able to access life-saving antiretroviral treatment.

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HUMRA QURAISHI


Humra Quraishi is a writer, columnist and journalist. She has authored Kashmir: The Unending tragedy, Reports From the Frontlines, Kashmir: The Untold Story, Views: Yours and Mine, Bad Time Tales, More Bad Time Tales, Divine Legacy: Dagars & Dhrupad and Meer. She has co- authored The Good The Bad and The Ridiculous: Profiles, Absolute Khushwant and a series of writings with the late Khushwant Singh. Her take on what's it like to be a singleton in today's turbulent times, is part of the Penguin published anthology, Chasing the Good Life: On Being Single. And, one of her essays, The State Can't Snatch Away our Children is part of the Zubaan published anthology, Of Mothers And Others. Her essay in the volume on the 1984 Sikh riots, 1984: In Memory and Imagination is titled, Why not a Collective Cry for Justice!  


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