Publié le mardi 28 décembre 2004 | http://prison.rezo.net/2004-11-women-prisoners-and-hiv/ Français The Numbers At the same time, Canadian women - not just women prisoners - are increasingly becoming infected with HIV, especially those who use injection drugs and whose sexual partners are at increased risk for HIV : The proportion of AIDS cases among women has increased from 5.6 percent of all AIDS cases before 1990 to 8.3 percent in 1995 and 16 percent in 2001. In addition, however, there is a need for initiatives that acknowledge that the problems encountered by women in the correctional environment often reflect, and are augmented by, their vulnerability and the abuse many of them have suffered outside prison. The task of protecting women prisoners from HIV transmission therefore presents different - and sometimes greater - challenges than that of preventing HIV infection in male prisoners. Underlying issues Many HIV-positive women do not receive the diagnostic and treatment services that could benefit them as early as do HIV-positive men. Among the reasons for this is that women are often unaware of having been exposed to HIV by their sexual or drug-using partners and as a result do not seek counselling, HIV testing, and care and treatment. Second, the needs of HIV-positive women differ from those of men, and social and community support are often less frequently available and less accessible. As a consequence, women are often less educated than men about HIV infection and AIDS and do not have the support structures they need. Third, disease manifestations attributable to HIV infection or AIDS are often different in women, which has led to underrecognition or delays in diagnosis. Thus, women who are infected have often been diagnosed as infected or having AIDS later than men. For all these reasons, the educational needs of women prisoners regarding HIV/AIDS are different from the needs of male prisoners and the need for HIV prevention programs in women’s prisons may be even more pressing than in men’s prisons. Recommendation Additional Reading R Lines. Action on HIV/AIDS in Prisons : Too Little, Too Late - A Report Card. Montreal : Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network, 2002. Reviews HIV/AIDS programs for women in Canadian prisons. Available at www.aidslaw.ca/Maincontent/issues/prisons/reportcard/toc.htm Correctional Service Canada. HIV/AIDS in Prisons : Final Report of the Expert Committee on AIDS and Prisons. Ottawa : Minister of Supply and Services Canada, 1994. Pages 109-113 discuss issues of particular relevance to women in Canadian prisons. Health Canada. HIV/AIDS Epi Update : HIV and AIDS among Women in Canada. Ottawa, April 2003. Information on the status of HIV and AIDS among women in Canada. Available at http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/pphb-dgspsp/publicat/epiu-aepi World Health Organization. WHO Guidelines on HIV Infection and AIDS in Prisons. Geneva : WHO, 1993 (WHO/GPA/DIR/93.3). Recommendations 44-46 concern incarcerated women. Available at http://www.aidslaw.ca/Maincontent/issues/prisons/APP5.html Third, revised and updated version, 2004. Copies of this info sheet are available on the Network website at http://www.aidslaw.ca/Maincontent/issues/prisons.htm and through the Canadian HIV/AIDS Information Centre (email : aids/sida@cpha.ca). Reproduction of the info sheet is encouraged, but copies may not be sold, and the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network must be cited as the source of this information. For further information, contact the Network (tel : 514 397-6828 ; fax : 514 397-8570 ; email : info@aidslaw.ca). Ce feuillet d’information est également disponible en français. Funded by Health Canada under the Canadian Strategy on HIV/AIDS. The findingsm interpretations, and views expressed in this publication are entirely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the policy or positions of Health Canada. © Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network, 2004
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