Assin-Fosu (C/R), March 13, - The Assin North Municipality in the Central
Region has seen a significant increase in reported cases of HIV infections
particularly among girls and pregnant women as it recorded a total of 218 cases
in 2017 made up of 162 females and 56 males.
In 2016, a total of 257 cases
comprising 186 females and 69 males were recorded.
Madam Admire Owusu, the Municipal
Disease Control Officer, who made this known in an interview with the Ghana
News Agency, was dismayed that regardless of the Health Directorate's
relentless effort to tame the spread of the menace, more women were being
infected as compared to men.
About 95 per cent of people
living With HIV/AIDS were infected through unsafe sex, Madam Owusu disclosed,
saying her office had increased the fight against the spread of the infection
through the combination of a multi-faceted comprehensive public education
approach and screening of pregnant women to reduce the prevalence rate.
She added that their goal was
particularly, to find the HIV status of pregnant women to properly counsel and
provide them with drugs, to prevent mother-to-child transmission, which was
critical to the prevention of the disease, and hinted that they were making
good progress as more pregnant women with the disease were being supported.
Madam Owusu identified the
absence of adequate resources to undertake “aggressive education” as one of the
reasons for the upsurge and advised the youth to lead morally responsible lives
to avoid contracting the disease, because 95 per cent was contracted through
unprotected sex with multiple partners, while the five percent was through
contaminated razors and used tooth brushes amongst others.
She advised Ghanaians to protect
themselves against the pandemic, emphasizing that HIV/AIDS was real and people
needed to be careful and abstain from casual sex as the best weapon in the
fight against it.
Madam Owusu appealed to the
general public to go for voluntary HIV/AIDS tests in order to know their status
to guide them on their lives, because drugs were available to help prolong
their lives in case anyone tested positive.
On stigmatization and
misconceptions surrounding the mode of contraction and drugs use, she said
"it was unacceptable to stigmatize those with the disease. All must come
out voluntarily to declare their status."
In addition to that, she appealed
to parents and guardians to monitor their children to ensure that they led
morally upright lives and avoided indulging in social vices.
HIV and AIDS remained an obstacle
to the socio-economic progress of the country and all must contribute towards
achieving the long term goal to end AIDS by 2030, she noted and admonished all
HIV and AIDS working partners to maximise their efforts to facilitate faster
positive behavioural change.
GNA

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