Nevis, West Indies. ?A Non-Tourist-Trap? Blog About Nevis.

March 23rd, 2011

Condor Calls For Urgent Action To HIV/AIDS Crisis In The Caribbean

Sam Condor - Deputy Prime Minister

Sam Condor – Deputy Prime Minister
Photo By Erasmus Williams

Basseterre, St. Kitts – Nevis
March 23, 2011 (CUOPM)

St. Kitts and Nevis’ Deputy Prime Minister Hon. Sam Condor says there was a need for an urgent adjustment in the Caribbean’s response “to what is one of the most devastating global epidemics of this century.”

“If we fail to have regional consensus on the pertinent issues going forward we risk marginalizing of our collective interest and needs,” Mr. Condor told Delegates from 16 Caribbean countries at a two-day meeting in Port of Spain, Trinidad, hoping to devise new regional strategies that will shape future HIV programming not only in the Caribbean, but globally.

The consultation will prepare the English, French, Spanish and Dutch-speaking Caribbean to adopt common policies ahead of the United Nations General Assembly High-Level Meeting on AIDS to be held in New York in June.

Mr. Condor, who was deputising for St. Kitts and Nevis Prime Minister the Hon. Dr. Denzil L.  Douglas, who has lead responsibility for HIV/AIDS matters within the quasi Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Cabinet, told the meeting being attended by senior policy makers as well as civil society organisations, that there is evidence to suggest that a transition in HIV/AIDS epidemiology “is imminent,” adding there is some indication “that the number of newly infected persons will be fewer than the number of persons placed on treatment.

“This is an indicator of the success of the global prevention efforts to date,” he said, noting that it made perfect sense now for the Caribbean to re-engineer its HIV/AIDS plans “to make them more relevant to prevalent needs as informed by situation analysis.

“Such systematic thinking we believe will attract the attention of the donor communities. Hence forth the critical success factor for the Caribbean and the recommended pathway…is to refocus attention and resources to selected evidence informed measures which will generate results and efficiencies while promoting country and people owned responses,” he said.

Mr. Condor said that it was therefore important for the region to understand that the way forward would be to “promote plans and programmes of, for and by the people supported by various entities representing public health, development and the private sector inclusive of the donor community”.

In the global AIDS pandemic, the Caribbean is the second-most affected region in the world. Among adults aged 15–44, AIDS has become the leading cause of death and Condor said that while donor community responded to the crisis message, there is now a need for the region to reform its various HIV/AIDS campaign projects including the Pan Caribbean Partnership Against HIV and AIDS (PANCAP), “if we are to be taken seriously”.

He warned that with other situations occurring globally, “we run the risk of intensity of focus shifted and resources being diminished at a time when several fiscal constraints are affecting the public health sector’s capacity to cope”.

In his address, Roger Samuel, the Minister in the Office of the Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago, said that the region must “find ways of encouraging young people as part of the solution to HIV/AIDS” telling the audience “we need to fight fire with fire.”

He said that the situation regarding HIV/AIDS in the region must be taken “far more seriously than it has been taken in the past” and that “it is critical that as we put our inputs together (we need) to determine …where we go from here.”

Samuel said that the new policies should be such that the new generation “will not have to re-invent the wheel” reminding that the “issues on HIV/AIDS affect all of us.”

The junior minister said that it was also important for the region to understand the socio-economic issues linked to the disease and that the existing global challenges were also presenting factors that needed to be taken into consideration.

Earlier, Director of UNAIDS Caribbean, Dr. Ernest Massiah, underscored the need for the region to adapt and revise new strategies to deal with the virus, while Ainsely Reid of the Jamaica-based Greater Involvement of People Living with HIV, said that despite the progress reported in the region “we are still losing many people”

He said that persons had become complacent to the point that “people are dying with the drugs in their hands”.

A statement issued by UNAIDS prior to the start of the high level meeting here quoted Dr. Massiah as saying that the Caribbean Consultation provides an “exceptional opportunity for the Caribbean to position itself in the world.

“If we don’t get our act together, the Caribbean will not have a voice when the future of the global AIDS response is determined,” he warned.

Related posts:

  1. Local Youth Call For Urgent Action
  2. Caribbean Islands Warned About HIV/AIDS
  3. Caribbean Countries Joins Forces In Fight Against HIV/AIDS
  4. Journalist Calls For Greater Effort In Addressing HIV/AIDS
  5. Grant Calls For End To Discrimination Against HIV AIDS Victims


March 21st, 2011

St. Peter’s Community HIV Testing Day

HIV - AIDS Testing

The Risk Is Not Knowing – Get Tested!

Basseterre, St. Kitts – Nevis
March 21, 2011

The general public, particularly persons living in St. Peter’s and surrounding communities are invited to come and find out their HIV status and get additional free screenings including pap smears on Saturday, March 26, 2011 at the St. Peter’s Health Centre, from 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.

Screenings also include those for cholesterol levels, blood sugar and blood pressure levels.  This Community Testing Day is a collaborative effort between the National AIDS Secretariat and the Community Health Services of the Ministry of Health.  All screenings will be conducted by community health nurses who are also trained Voluntary Counseling and Testing Providers.  The staff of the National AIDS Secretariat will also be on hand to distribute HIV/AIDS material.

Residents of St. Peter’s and surrounding communities are therefore encouraged to go to the St. Peter’s Community Centre on Saturday, March 26, between 9:00 am to 1:00 p.m. to get their free screenings.  All information is strictly confidential.


Related posts:

  1. Provider Initiated HIV Testing Covers All Bases
  2. Nevis Island HIV/AIDS Testing Policy
  3. Nevis HIV/AIDS Voluntary Counseling and Testing Day
  4. St. Kitts – Nevis Continues HIV / AIDS Testing
  5. The Caribbean Steps Up HIV/AIDS Testing


December 24th, 2010

Nevis Health Officials Commend HIV/AIDS Coordinating Unit

Hensley Daniel and Patricia Hanley

Hensley Daniel and Patricia Hanley

Charlestown, Nevis
December 23, 2010

Officials within the Nevis Island Administration’s [NIA] Ministry of Health the Honourable Hensley Daniel and his advisor Mrs. Patricia Hanley have extolled high praise on the staff of the HIV/AIDS Coordinating Unit in light of its recent hosting of Voluntary Counseling and Testing [VCT] Day.

The fourth annual free testing and counseling exercise was held on December 15 on the Administration Building grounds in Charlestown where persons, despite the inclement weather, sought to “know their status.”

“We want to keep the focus on HIV/AIDS because it is very important for people to know their status and of course if you know your status then you can shape your behaviour behind that status,” the health minister said in an interview with the Department of Information following the exercise.

He added that VCT Day was one of his ministry’s numerous initiatives to promote “preventive rather than curative” healthcare while monitoring “the extent of HIV/AIDS in the community.”

“It is very important for us in the planning and execution of programmes for HIV/AIDS because if you have an increase incidence of HIV/AIDS that means you have to think about resources for antiretroviral drugs and all those kinds of things so the VCT is part of the prevention process and its part of the education process in action so that people know their status and work along with it,” he said.

Advisor Hanley, who served as a nurse at the Alexandra Hospital for many years, was among the Nevisians who participated in the testing exercise and said her presence at the event was “to give full support to Nadine and her staff.”

“I think that they are doing a great job to educate the public on this voluntary testing,” she said.

In an interview with AIDS Programme Coordinator for the HIV/AIDS Coordinating Unit Mrs. Nadine Carty-Caines she said that while VCT Day was held on December 15, it formed part of her unit’s outreach programme for the World Aids Day campaign.

The unit’s World AIDS Day campaign included an AIDS awareness march and a dental quiz which was done in conjunction with the Dental Unit.

In responding to concerns about the level of privacy involved in test taking, Mrs. Carty-Caines reminded Nevisians that “testing is a confidential process.”

“In HIV we use codes so no names are attached to the document that will be sent to the lab. The person who does the counseling is not the person who draws the blood; that sheet now is sent to a lab person and they will run the test then that result will go back to the counselor or the doctor then the doctor or the counselor, which is the first contact, will be able to track that number based on the information given to them at the first point then they would be able to give you your information.

“It is between you, the provider: which is the doctor or the VCT person, and the client,” she explained.

Related posts:

  1. Nevis HIV/AIDS Coordinating Unit Receives Assistance
  2. 2009 Nevis HIV / AIDS Coordinating Unit Plans
  3. Nevis HIV/AIDS Unit Offer Free Testing To Fathers
  4. St. Kitts Residents Encouraged To Know AIDS Status
  5. Caribbean Countries Joins Forces In Fight Against HIV/AIDS


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