The Scotsman

World Aids Day targets an end to stigma and transmissi­on of HIV

- By JOSEPH ANDERSON joseph.anderson@scotsman.com

It is a fight against an infection and the stigma it carries that is keenly felt in Edinburgh, which was home to an epidemic of HIV and AIDS during the late 1980s and early 1990s.

Now, as World Aids Day is marked today, Mike, a peer support worker with scotland’ s HIV charity Waverley Care, has issued a reminder :“people with HIV are human beings.

“There's nothing wrong with them. They're not infected. They're not diseased. They're not anything that needs to be shunned. They are just human beings like everyone else.”

Mike recalls: “I was diagnosed in 1998. I didn’t realise I was ill. The whole process was very badly dealt with and very badly supported. Nothing seemed to knit together properly.

“I was told I had to go on medication immediatel­y, and was basically told that if it didn’t work, I probably had about six months to live. It felt like a death sentence.

“But then, with the introducti­onof retro-v ira ls, things started improving dramatical­ly. My health started to improve considerab­ly, and we haven’t had a death from AIDS in this country for a considerab­le amount of time now.”

Waverley Care was founded in the midst of the HIV, AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome) epidemic, in 1989, to build the UK’S first purposebui­lt AIDS hospice, Milestone House, on the ground soft he old City Hospital in the south of the capital.

According to the charity, fear and stigma surrounded HIV at the time, and local people were “understand­ably nervous” about the hospice.

However, when Princess Diana visited the hospice in October 1991, there was a “big moment in changing perception­s”, as the Princess of Wales “sent a positive message that contradict­ed negative media coverage”.

Now the charity works to help Scotland achieve its goals to have no new HIV transmissi­ons by 2030, as announced by then-public health minister Joe Fitzpatric­k in 2020.

Waverley Care says that to do this, Scotland needs to introduce opt-out HIV testing in emergency department­s, as successful­ly trialled in some London hospitals, and widen access to PREP – a preventati­ve medication that is highly effective in preventing HIV when taken correctly.

Scotland was the first country in the UK to make PREP available via the NHS. However, it is only accessible at sexual health clinics and waverley care wants it to be expanded and accessed at GPS and pharmacies.

“I think there's a lot more acceptance in places like Edinburgh and Glasgow because of the size of the gay communitie­s who have done so much work,” said mike .“a lot of the discrimina­tion does tend to come from older people, who lived through the epidemic years, and it’s never gone away – the falling gravestone­s and all that [from the infamous 1986 AIDS public health campaign].”

Waverley care chief executive Grant Sugden described world Aids Day as “an important day to reflect”, adding: “However, it is also a day to look to the future. In Scotland, we are at a pivotal moment in that we could be one of the first countries in the world with zero new h iv transmissi­ons.

“I am hopeful we can get there, but we need strong leadership from the Government."

 ?? ?? ↑ The red ribbon is worn as a symbol of awareness and solidarity on World AIDS Day, which takes place today
↑ The red ribbon is worn as a symbol of awareness and solidarity on World AIDS Day, which takes place today

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