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Prevention & Care
Responses to HIV and AIDS incorprate prevention and care
Plan's responses to HIV and AIDS are age-appropriate addressing the needs and entitlements of infants, young children and adolescents. For infants, this focuses on improving the safety of pregnancy, delivery and infant care. For young children, this focuses on child protection issues. And for adolescents, this focuses on promoting safe and fulfilling sexuality.
Plan's responses to HIV and AIDS are gender-specific reducing gender inequality and improving the conditions of girls and women affected by HIV and AIDS. When families are affected by AIDS, girls are more likely than boys to be taken out of school to care for sick relatives or siblings; they often have less access to medical care and less protection against property theft by relatives after the death of their spouse.
Plan's responses to HIV and AIDS are tailored to local context. Poverty, tradition, gender inequality and other social factors severely limit young people's ability to adopt behaviours that protect them from HIV infection.
Plan's responses to HIV and AIDS start with the life experience of children and adolescents. Below are examples illustrating the range of programmes Plan supports in its attempt to reduce vulnerability to HIV infection:
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Trafficked for a bike in Togo Hada wanted a bike; his family couldn't afford it, so he decided to go and work in plantations in Benin and Nigeria. He worked long hours in hazardous circumstances. His story is typical of many boys trafficked each year from Togo |
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The story of Sita Sita was one of up to 10,000 girls aged between 9 and 16 who are sold and trafficked into prostitution every year in Nepal. These girls work in fortress-like brothels where violence, sexual assault and intimidation are routine |
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Challenges to tradition in Nepal In Nepal, inequality in pay between men and women is widespread, Plan is working to discourage this through giving community members the opportunity to discuss the issues |
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Hope for African Children More than 13 million African children have been orphaned and millions more have otherwise been affected by AIDS since the early 1980s. Read about Hope for African Children Initiative. |
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