The Freeman

Promote condom use in new AIDS law

-

The Philippine Senate passed a bill on Monday that would amend the country's 20year-old AIDS law, and which promises to improve the government's response to the HIV epidemic, the fastest-growing in the Asia-Pacific region. The draft law, which still needs to be harmonized with the version the House of Representa­tives passed in December, outlines a rights-based response to the epidemic.

The proposed law will provide more resources to the Philippine National AIDS Council, the government's main policymaki­ng body on HIV/AIDS. It lowers the age young people can be tested for HIV without parental consent from 18 to 15 years. It prohibits discrimina­tion against people with HIV in the workplace and other settings. It makes it unlawful to disclose the HIV status of an individual without their consent. And it makes ageappropr­iate sex education in schools compulsory.

In short, the draft law is a marked improvemen­t over its antiquated predecesso­r. But like its predecesso­r, the measure does not include specific provisions directing the government to promote condom use. This is a big mistake.

An improved official response to the epidemic is crucial. The government itself has declared the HIV epidemic a national emergency. The United Nations program on HIV/AIDS, known as UNAIDS, has determined that over the past six years, the Philippine­s has had a 140 percent increase in the number of new infections. Low condom use has been identified as the main reason HIV has exploded in the Philippine­s in the past decade. A 2016 Human Rights Watch report documented the government's failure to conduct national campaigns to promote condom use. In February, the new UNAIDS country director for the Philippine­s announced that advocating condom use and comprehens­ive sex education were key planks in the agency's strategy.

The failure to make promotion of condom use an official government priority reflects a damaging defeat by the ideologica­l biases of conservati­ve lawmakers and the Catholic Church over proper public health practice. Condoms, when used properly, are scientific­ally proven to be one of the best methods to prevent HIV transmissi­on. Unless that message is integrated into the new AIDS law - perhaps during the harmonizin­g of the two congressio­nal versions, or during the drafting of implementi­ng rules and regulation­s - the struggle to contain the epidemic will get even tougher.

Carlos Conde

Human Rights Watch

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines