Reverend John Azumah, a crusader against HIV and AIDS
through the word of God has called on the clergy to encourage persons living with
the human Immunodefiency virus to report to health facilities for treatment.
According to
him, some men of God still believed that HIV was only acquired through
spiritual means and not through unprotected sex and other ways such as blood
transfusion, sharing razor blades with a person living with HIV (PLHIV) and
from mother-to-child transmission, among others.
When a member of
your church acquire HIV, encourage him/her to seek medical support (which deals
with the physical aspect) he preached, while you the man of God also deal with
the spiritual aspect through prayers.
Pastor Azumah
made this solemn call in Tamale at the end of a three-day training workshop for
media practitioners in the Northern Region on HIV and AIDS reporting organized by
the Ghana AIDS Commission in collaboration with the Ghana Journalists
Association.
The man of God and
his wife who have been living with the virus for about ten years now, said
Jesus Christ recognized the importance of the hospital when he told a story
about the Good Samaritan who gave care and support to the man who was robbed and
beaten to pulp by robbers on his way from Jerusalem to Jericho.
The
training was in line with government's National Strategic Plan (NSP) 2011 -
2015 aimed at reducing by 50 percent the spread of HIV and AIDS, and mother-to-child
transmission to eventually stop new infections in the country.
Participants
were taken through topics such as; The National Response to HIV and AIDS;
Progress and Challenges; and National Strategic Plan 2011-2015: Towards
Achieving Universal Access to Comprehensive HIV Services.
About
50 media practitioners from radio, television and print were trained on HIV and
AIDS aimed at equipping them with knowledge to help ensure effective reportage
to curb the spread of the disease.
Director
of Policy and Planning at the Ghana AIDS Commission, Dr Joseph Amuzu, who spoke
on behalf of the Director General of the GAC, stressed the need for effective
and continued education on the spread of HIV and AIDS in order to transform the
lifestyle of the populace to ensure the elimination of the disease.
He
said even though figures from GAC showed a continued reduction in the spread of
the disease in recent years, more work needed to be done if the country was to
attain her objectives outlined in the NSP 2011-2015.
Currently,
the total number of persons living with HIV in Ghana is 217,428, whilst
the number of HIV positive children is 31,576, HIV positive Pregnant
Women 12,854 and annual new HIV infections for adults stands at 8,925 and that
of children 2,933.
Thus,
recognizing the good role the media can play in contributing towards the achievement
of the NSP 2011-2015, a capacity building workshop had to be organized for
practitioners across the country so that the information could get down to the
populace very well.
Vice
President of the Ghana Journalists Association Affail Monney who was one of the
workshop facilitators charged media practitioners to go the extra mile to
produce critical stories that would help to curb the spread of HIV and AIDS.
Shift
your attention a bit from politics, he said, and report on challenges that are
facing the rural poor so that life could be better for them.
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