Abstract

ABSTRACTIn the wake of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, caregivers are struggling to support HIV-affected children. For reasons of equity and efficiency, their needs can be best met through strong social protections and policies. This paper presents a conceptual framework to help address the needs of HIV-affected caregivers and to prioritize policies. We describe the needs that are common across diverse caregiving populations (e.g., economic security); the needs which are intensified (e.g., leave to care for sick children) or unique to providing care to HIV-affected children (e.g., ARV treatment). The paper then explores the types of social policies that would facilitate families meeting these needs. We outline a basic package of policies that would support HIV-affected families, and would meet goals agreed to by national governments. We examine the availability of these policies in 25 highly affected countries in sub-Saharan Africa. The majority of countries guarantee short-term income protection during illness, free primary school, and educational inclusion of children with special needs. However, there are significant gaps in areas critical to family economic security and healthy child development. Fewer than half of the countries we analyzed guarantee a minimum wage that will enable families to escape poverty; only six have eliminated tuition fees for secondary school; and only three offer paid leave to care for sick children. Filling these policy gaps, as well as making mental health and social services more widely available, is essential to support caregiving by families for HIV-affected children. As part of the HIV agenda, the global community can help national governments advance towards their policy targets. This would provide meaningful protection for families affected by HIV, as well as for millions of other vulnerable families and children across the region.

Highlights

  • Children have been deeply affected by the HIV epidemic

  • A growing body of literature attests to the economic, psychological, and social strain of caring for HIV-affected children, and to the downstream impact this has on child outcomes

  • National policies and protections offer another way to reach HIV-affected families. Both the United Nations and its member countries have already committed to a broader platform of social protection to address poverty and inequality. This movement has its foundation in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), and encompasses the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), and the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) (UN General Assembly, 1948, 1979, 1989)

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Summary

AIDS Care

ISSN: 0954-0121 (Print) 1360-0451 (Online) Journal homepage: https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/caic. Caregiver supportive policies to improve child outcomes in the wake of the HIV/AIDS epidemic: an analysis of the gap between what is needed and what is available in 25 high prevalence countries.

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The policy gap between what is needed and what is available
Constitutional guarantee to health
Not available Not available
South Sudan
Methodological limitations and knowledge gaps
Opportunities for advancing policy
Full Text
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