‘We cannot ignore the AIDS plight of the disabled’
August 9th, 2008
From [Toronto] Globe and Mail:
Columnist and public health reporter Andre Picard says HIV-AIDS initiatives have sought to identify marginalized groups for treatment and prevention but “the largest of the marginalized groups has been callously ignored: People with disabilities.” An excerpt:
What few studies have been done — and there has been a lot more research done on transgendered people with HIV-AIDS than on disabled people with HIV-AIDS — suggests that the infection rate is significantly higher, probably two to three times more than the able-bodied and sound of mind.
Why?
In most societies, the disabled are shunned, at best hidden away and pitied. They are invariably the poorest of the poor: denied education and employment opportunities; unlikely to access health care services; frequent victims of physical and sexual violence; far more likely to end up in jail, particularly if they have a psychiatric illness.
Diane Richler, president of Inclusion International, responds in a letter to the editor. She says people with disabilities in Africa are largely ignored by education campaigns. An excerpt:
Local myths also contribute to vulnerability. In many African cultures, men believe that sexual relations with a virgin will cure sexually transmitted diseases, and girls with intellectual disabilities are easy prey.
(Globe and Mail photo)


