/ 14 November 2003

Niger opens first Aids clinic

The government of Niger and the local Red Cross have opened a specialist out-patient clinic and public awareness centre for HIV/Aids in the capital Niamey.

The centre, which opened in October, will provide Aids testing facilities and provide specialist medical treatment and psychological support for those who suffer from the incurable disease. It was set up with the help of the French Red Cross.

”Our dream has started to come true. We are convinced that the clinic will provide drugs and psycho-social help to patients,” said Ali Bandiare, president of the Niger Red Cross.

Working with the National Programme for the Fight against HIV/Aids (PNLS), the centre hopes to track and treat opportunistic infections, deliver anti-retroviral medicines and provide therapeutic assistance.

The doctor in charge said patients will benefit from post-HIV-test counselling. Depending on a patient’s condition, some will be kept at the facility for observation and treatment for the whole day, he said. However, all will be sent home in the evening because the clinic does not have in-patient facilities.

Officials said the Ministry of Health hopes to set up more HIV/Aids treatment centres across this landlocked and largely desert country. However, for the time being, the clinic in Niamey will be used an experiment to assess the need and gauge the public’s response, they added.

”People living with HIV/Aids hope that they will find at this centre humane, courteous, understanding and willing staff to attend to them,” said Salifou Ibrahim, president of People living with HIV/Aids.

”We hope it will give us the hope and a real sense of life,” he added.

A survey conducted in 2002, supported by the United Nations Joint Programme on HIV/Aids, concluded that there was an HIV prevalence rate of 0,87% in Niger. That indicates that about 80 000 people of the country’s 11-million population are carriers of the virus.

The survey noted a strong prevalance of HIV infection among truck drivers, commercial sex workers, inmates and migrant workers returning from countries with higher prevalence rates.

HIV infection rates of up to 50% have been noted among prostitutes in the provincial towns of Dinkou, Tahoua Komabangou, said Dr Bagnou Abdoulaye, head of the national intersector coordination body against HIV/Aids.

In Tahoua, a town 350km northeast of Niamey, where returning migrants are particularly numerous, nearly one in three patients admitted at the local hospital tested HIV-positive, according to a survey carried out last year and published by the state-owned publication the Sunday Sahel. — Irin