IAS 2013: Scientists and Clinicians Must Challenge HIV-related Stigma
- Details
- Category: HIV Law & Criminalization
- Published on Friday, 19 July 2013 00:00
- Written by Edwin J Bernard

Scientists should not only create knowledge to improve the HIV epidemic, they also have a duty to speak out about human rights abuses and ensure that access to effective, high quality HIV prevention, care, and treatment programs are unimpeded by laws, stigma, and discrimination, experts in human rights and law asserted at several sessions held during the 7th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention (IAS 2013) this month in Kuala Lumpur.
[Produced in collaboration with Aidsmap.com]
Sessions at the conference highlighting laws, policies, and practices that impact on HIV-related stigma and discrimination included Monday’s plenary on HIV, law, and stigma; Tuesday’s satellite session highlighting how scientists can help end HIV-related travel restrictions; and Wednesday’s workshop examining HIV-related stigma in community and healthcare settings in Asia.
Punitive Laws Impeding the HIV Response
In many countries, the criminalization of HIV non-disclosure, exposure, and transmission, criminal laws on sex work, sodomy or anti-homosexuality laws, and the criminalization of people who use illegal drugs are impeding the HIV response, Aziza Ahmed, assistant professor of law at Northeastern University told the conference.
"We are undermining our own efforts by not taking a stronger stand to overturn and change laws and regulations that are further marginalizing and stigmatizing some of the most vulnerable individuals in the context of the HIV epidemic," she asserted.
Countries where there are no such laws, or where a harm reduction approach is taken, tend to have more successful HIV programs, said Ahmed, because key populations at risk of HIV, or those living with HIV, feel able to access prevention, care, and treatment without a disabling fear of discrimination or prosecution.
Ahmed, who served as member of the Technical Advisory Group for the Global Commission on HIV and the Law, also highlighted that laws and regulations are structuring what we know about the HIV epidemic, impacting on funding, research and program implementation.
"Conditions on aid funding are often premised on the same fears and the same politics that actually undermine the very HIV efforts that they support," noted Ahmed, citing the anti-prostitution "loyalty oath," recently struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court for U.S.-based organizations, but still operational outside the U.S.
"Discrimination Does Nothing Good for Anyone"
At least 44 countries still have some form of entry, stay, work, or residence restrictions for people with HIV, according to data presented at Tuesday’s satellite session on HIV-related travel restrictions, co-convened by the International AIDS Society, UNAIDS, European AIDS Treatment Group, and the Global Network of People Living with HIV (GNP+).
The session included emotional personal testimony from Owie Franco, who was tested for HIV without his consent when he moved to Saudi Arabia for work, detained for 2 weeks, and deported back to his home country of the Philippines. "I was not treated with dignity," he said with powerful understatement.
The satellite session heard that scientists and clinicians can help change such problematic laws, policies, and practices through advocating for a rational, rights-based approach.
"Such laws and policies have nothing to do with public health, they are about political expediency," stated noted Malaysian political activist Marina Mahathir during a lively discussion on strategies to improve human rights and migration issues for people living with HIV. "Discrimination does nothing good for anyone," she concluded.
Clinicians Can Help Policymakers
Many countries in Asia are facing concentrated epidemics amongst key at-risk populations, where providing HIV prevention and treatment services are hampered by HIV-related stigma. Wednesday’s professional development workshop, "Breaking Through Stigma: The Missing Component in Biomedical Prevention Efforts," highlighted the role that clinicians and scientists can play in helping to improve the policy response to HIV.
"Stigma and discrimination must be recognized as a significant barrier to the HIV response,” said panelist, John De Wit from the Centre for Social Research in Health at the University of New South Wales. "Scientists, clinicians, and policymakers must be made to recognize this and act on changing this."
Madhumita Das, senior technical specialist at the International Center for Research on Women’s Asia Regional Office, highlighted a pilot stigma-reduction intervention in India. "Stigma Busters" is part of a larger effort to adapt and pilot test a global stigma-reduction framework to the Indian context. It successfully trained and mobilized members of India’s local governing bodies known as Panchayat in Nandi, Karnataka state, to lead stigma-reduction efforts in 5 communities and to create a platform for ongoing dialogue between the Panchayat and people living with HIV. The Indian government is now planning to integrate a stigma-reduction framework into its National AIDS Control Program.
Call to Action
Professor Ahmed ended her plenary talk with a call to action for the scientists and clinicians attending the conference. "We cannot simply produce knowledge about the HIV epidemic, it is our duty to ensure that we create a legal and policy…environment that does not discriminate, that does not stigmatize, and does not marginalize the very people who need support and care," she said
Her words were apparently heeded by the conference’s international co-chair, IAS president Francoise Barré-Sinoussi, who used the opportunity of Wednesday’s closing session to condemn the recent reinstatement of Provision 39A in Greece, which allows forced HIV testing of suspected sex workers, drug users, and undocumented migrants.
"As president of the IAS, I strongly condemn this move and urge the Greek Government to rethink its position," she said. "HIV infections are already increasing in Greece due to the economic crisis, and a mandatory policy of detainment and testing will only fuel the epidemic there."
Barré-Sinoussi concluded, "As we keep repeating over the years, there will be no end to the HIV epidemic without advancing human rights in parallel."
7/13/13
References
A Ahmed. HIV, Law and Stigma. 7th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention. Kuala Lumpur, June 30-July 3, 2013. Abstract MOPL0105.
International AIDS Society, UNAIDS, European AIDS Treatment Group, and the Global Network of People Living with HIV. Towards "Zero Discrimination": What Can Scientists Do to Help End HIV-Related Restrictions on Entry, Stay and Residence? 7th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention. Kuala Lumpur, June 30-July 3, 2013.
Breaking Through Stigma: The Missing Component in Biomedical Prevention Efforts. 7th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention. Kuala Lumpur, June 30-July 3, 2013.
F Barré-Sinoussi. Closing speech. 7th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention. Kuala Lumpur, June 30-July 3, 2013.