Living Positively - West and Northern Africa
Countries
Burkina Faso, Senegal, Togo
Living Positively was initiated by the Family Health and AIDS (FHA) project and partners in 2002 to address the stigmatisation of, and discrimination against, people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHAs) in Francophone Africa. A comic book and video promote the concept of "living positively" with HIV/AIDS. These materials are geared toward the general public as well as those infected or affected by HIV/AIDS, and cover topics such as how to reveal one's status to loved ones, join an association, accept a parent or friend living with HIV, and follow a healthy lifestyle.
Communication Strategies
"Living Positively" is a 42-minute video featuring testimonies from West Africans living with HIV/AIDS that describe how their families and community accepted them after learning their HIV status. A wide range of topics, from the most intimate to the more practical, is explored.
"Marcelline et Jojo: Un combat pour la vie" is a 32-page colour comic book that tells the story of a young student in his twenties who has just learned his HIV status and does not know where to turn. The publication provides advice on nutrition, the treatment of opportunistic infections, and the need to join a support group and/or an association for PLWHAs.
The objectives and content of the comic book and video were developed during a workshop that brought together PLWHAs; representatives of several PLWHA groups; representatives from NGOs in Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast, Mali, Senegal and Togo; health providers; HIV/AIDS programme managers; cartoonists; and a filmmaker.
The comic book and video will be distributed throughout Francophone Africa (West and Central) to national AIDS control programmes, PLWHA associations, AIDS NGOs, voluntary counseling and testing (VCT) sites, and FHA partners.
Partners
FHA, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health's Center for Communication Programs (CCP), UNAIDS, RAP+, le Réseau Africain des Personnes Vivant avec le VIH/SIDA. The programme is supported by the U.S. Agency of International Development (USAID).
Source
Press release forwarded by Kim Martin to The Communication Initiative on February 13, 2003.
Placed on the Communication Initiative site April 03 2003
Last Updated June 09 2009
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