Download the PowerPoint slideshow here:
Slide Show – WE-ACTx in Rwanda
Mardge H. Cohen, MD
Anne-Christine d’Adesky, MS
Kathryn Anastos, MD
Knowing that when we are sick with AIDS, we have no shelter on our head and no school fees for our children, that is what kills us.
Laurence Mukamurangwa
Rwandan Women’s Network
June 7, 2005
IN 2003, RWANDAN WOMEN’S ASSOCIATIONS ISSUED AN international call to aid women who had been raped and
infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) during the genocide, and who were becoming sick and dying.
As difficult as it was for the world to comprehend the tragedy of the 1994 events, it was even more incomprehensible
that while women with HIV were not receiving antiretroviral medications, alleged perpetrators were receiving treatment in prison.
Read the full article here: Women in Rwanda Another World is Possible (PDF)
Document Downloads: Overlapping Epidemics
— Short Report (PDF)
— Full Report (PDF)
US Office
3345 22nd street
San Francisco, CA 94110
(415) 648-1728
Rwanda Office
Box 5141
Kigali, Rwanda
(+250) 0830 2089
Contact: Anne-christine d’Adesky
(415) 690-6199 cell
PRESS RELEASE
December 1, 2006
New Report Highlights Challenges of Integrating
Food into HIV Programs
More holistic global model of care & new development partnerships with focus on poverty needed to respond to urgent demand for food by millions with HIV and AIDS in hard-hit regions.
San Francisco-A new report entitled “Overlapping Epidemics: Challenges and Strategies for Integrating Nutrition and HIV Programs” – Grassroots Perspectives on a Global Problem” is being issued today by the Women’s Equity in Access to Care and Treatment (WE-ACTx). WE-ACTx is an international nonprofit AIDS program that began working in Rwanda in 2004 to provide HIV care and antiretroviral (ARV) treatment access to genocide and rape survivors, in partnership with the Rwandan government and local NGOs. WE-ACTx runs two clinics in Kigali serving ~ 5000 clients.
The new report examines the challenges facing grassroots AIDS groups and provider NGOs globally who are facing a rising demand for food that experts say may soon eclipse antiretroviral medicine. The report summarizes the views and ‘best practice’ ideas of representatives in international and local agencies working across the fields of HIV/AIDS, nutrition and development. Research for the report was supported by a grant from Keep a Child Alive (KCA) in New York.
“WE-ACTx is facing the urgent challenge that most groups working in the field of AIDS in poor countries are dealing with today, which is hunger and poverty that are root causes of the epidemic,” said Anne-christine d’Adesky, co- author of the report, and Executive Co-Director of WE-ACTx. She is also author of the 2004 global AIDS book, ‘Moving Mountains,’ which profiled challenges and successful efforts of early pioneers introducing HIV treatment around the world.
“Food remains the number one need of many of our clients, alongside antiretrovirals,” said d’Adesky. “Without food, people are often reluctant to start ARVs, which may be difficult to take without food, or they struggle to maintain good health if they lose access to food. We need global AIDS policies and more holistic, practical guidelines that address the link of HIV to food insecurity and poverty and gender inequity — and their impact on each other.”
WE-ACTx has been working with Rwandan NGO partners to identify and implement innovative solutions that support sustainable food access for HIV clients. “We particularly wanted to identify best practice approaches that can be shared with other grassroots groups,” said d’Adesky.
Among the findings of the report:
This report will be available at the WE-ACTx and KCA websites (www.we-actx.org | www.keepachildalive.org).