Jamaica Gleaner

Don’t coerce women living with HIV to tie off

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THE EDITOR, Sir,

PATRICE (NOT her real name) is a woman living with HIV. In a consultati­on with her doctor, she explained that she and her partner were planning to have a child. The doctor is said to have told her that she was wicked to want to get pregnant and pass the virus on to her child.

While our allies in the healthcare system are far greater than in previous years, Patrice’s story is one example of the discrimina­tion that people living with HIV face from some healthcare workers.

With the widespread availabili­ty of antiretrov­iral treatments, people living with HIV have been living long and productive lives for years now. This includes healthy sexual and reproducti­ve lives. Proper adherence to treatment and medical supervisio­n significan­tly reduce the chances of transmitti­ng the virus to one’s partner and virtually eliminates the chance that a woman will transmit HIV to a foetus. Despite these advances, there is significan­t evidence to suggest that some healthcare workers in Jamaica regularly coerce HIVpositiv­e women to undergo tubal ligation (tie-off ).

Women must never be denied the opportunit­y to give full and informed consent for sterilisat­ion or other long-term contracept­ive procedures because they are HIVpositiv­e. Coerced sterilisat­ion is a grave violation of the human rights of HIV-positive women, even classified by the OHCHR as an act of torture and cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment. It manifests itself in ways that include offering financial incentives, deliberate­ly providing misinforma­tion, or using intimidati­on practices such as denying healthcare serves in an attempt to compel positive women to undergo the procedure.

This discrimina­tory practice is linked to the false belief that HIVpositiv­e women are somehow not fit to be mothers or that HIVpositiv­e women who become pregnant are irresponsi­ble and incapable of managing their own healthcare needs and those of their families. This practice also prevails because of weak or non-existent informed consent policies and procedures to protect patients’ rights or where medical personnel who violate such policies are generally not held accountabl­e.

FORCED CONTRACEPT­IVES

Additional­ly, there is evidence to suggest that HIV-positive women are also unwittingl­y placed on long-term contracept­ives without consent or consultati­on. In a recent PLHIV training workshop, three different women shared their experience­s of being told to go to ‘X’ clinic on ‘Y’ date to get a contracept­ive method. The requisite consultati­on regarding their preference­s and the details (side effects, etc) of type of method being issued were not provided in these cases.

In support of our members across the island and also the approximat­ely 30,000 Jamaicans living with HIV, we encourage a joint approach from the Ministry of Health and Ministry of Justice to bring the practice of coerced tubal ligation to an end and make amends to the affected persons. Our first line of defence must be to provide continuous and comprehens­ive education and sensitivit­y training for our healthcare workers. This is a must if we are to make healthcare in Jamaica more effective, improve the lives of people living with HIV, and eradicate HIV altogether in Jamaica.

We must also be prepared to take action against violators of human rights and establish accountabi­lity, a process that includes introducin­g mechanisms so that violations are not permitted in the future.

In offering redress to persons affected by coerced sterilisat­ion, JN+ advocates that we offer free sterilisat­ion-reversal procedures. Law enforcemen­t, including the judiciary, must also be trained to appropriat­ely investigat­e, prosecute, and adjudicate allegation­s of violations of reproducti­ve rights, especially as they relate to HIV-positive women. ELTON JOHNSON

Social Media and Communicat­ions Officer communicat­ions@jnplus.org

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