Accra, Jan. 11, - The Ghana AIDS
Commission (GAC) has said there is still no known cure or vaccine for HIV and
AIDS in the country currently.
The Commission has, therefore,
advised persons living with HIV (PLHIV) to stick strictly to the
Anti-Retroviral medicines to help their bodies’ suppress the virus so they
could live healthy lives.
Dr Mokowa Blay Adu-Gyamfi, the
Director General of the Ghana AIDS Commission, who refuted the claims of herbal
cure for HIV at a media briefing in Accra, said the claims should be ignored.
She told PLHIV that; “If you
think herbal medicines are good for you, have them as supplements like you take
vitamins. Please tell everybody who is living with the virus never to neglect
taking the antiretroviral medication in addition to the therapy.”
The briefing was held at the end
of a two-day Annual Strategic Planning Meeting of the Ghana AIDS Commission
(GAC), and it aimed at charting the way forward in the fight of HIV epidemic
for 2018.
It was attended by regional,
district and national officers of the Commission, and chaired by Dr Adu-Gyamfi.
Dr Adu-Gyamfi said the strategic
objectives of GAC for 2018 were to ensure the availability of funding for all
relevant HIV programmes and review and formulate policies towards epidemic
control.
She said currently there were
enough antiretroviral drugs in the country, including paediatric medication,
emphasising that “GAC is not short of medication”.
She said the Commission, however,
had challenges with funding, which would enable it to carry out it education,
counselling and testing activities, among others.
A Ghana AIDS Fund would be
launched by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo in May, this year, to
encourage private entities and businesses to contribute into it, against the
backdrop of donor fatigue.
GNA

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