martes, 17 de mayo de 2011

Our Vision :- Bringing Hope to HIV/AIDS Stand Their Families to Transform Their Lives through Love of God



Users (IDUs), men who have sex with men (MSM), and migrants. There is an urgent need to scale up effective interventions, especially among IDUs. Nepal's poverty, political instability and gender inequality, combined with low levels of education and literacy make the task all the more challenging, as do the denial, stigma, and discrimination that surround HIV/AIDS.

The first case of AIDS in Nepal was reported in 1988. Since then, the numbers have risen among the country’s 28 million people. By the end of 2005, more than 950 cases of AIDS and over 5,800 cases of HIV infection were officially reported, with three times as many men reported to be infected as women. However, given the limitations of Nepal’s public health surveillance system, the actual number of infections is expected to be much higher. UNAIDS estimates that 75,000 people were living with HIV at the end of 2007bbbMillion people were living with HIV/AIDS at the end of 2012
Nepal’s HIV epidemic is largely concentrated in high-risk groups, especially female sex workers (FSW), IDUs, MSM and migrants. Injection drug use appears to be extensive in Nepal and to overlap with commercial sex. Another important factor is the high number of sex workers who migrate or are trafficked to MumbaiIndia to work, thereby increasing HIV prevalence in the sex workers’ network in Nepal more rapidly
What about Nepal’s children?
*      12,000 Nepali children are taken to India and the Gulf to work in the sex industry every year.
*      20% of teenagers consider pre-marital sex okay
*      Current drug use is at 20%
*      80% of street children sniff glue
*      HIV, and drug use amongst street children is neglected by organizations working on HIV and drug issues

Children Affected By HIV/AIDS
          Huge and Growing Number of Orphaned Children in Nepali day by day increase, Number of Double Orphans Lose Both Mother And father, same of the children will have lost one parents.
          Rising Number of Children of all descriptions, not jut Orphans due to AIDS or other cause are suffering as a result of the epidemic. Children are being affected economically, socially and psychologically. Reduced access to education and health care child labors, migration and homelessness, psychological impacts include depression, guilt, anger and fear caused by parental illness and death




No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario