Desire Society: No child should live life of a HIV-positive

AIDS & HIV

Source: deccanchronicle.com

Bengaluru: Over 320 children and adolescents died every day from AIDS and AIDS-related causes in 2018, states a recent report released by the UN International Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF).

To take care of the health needs of such children, Desire Society was set up in 2005 in Hyderabad. The NGO now has presence in five states, including in Karnataka (Bengaluru), and an overseas office in the United States. It focuses on disadvantaged children, with special emphasis on HIV-positive victims, children abandoned by one or both parents, children of sex workers, truck drivers, and kids who have been abused and those belonging to vulnerable socio-economic sections.

The NGO wants to ensure that no children in the country lives life as a HIV-positive. “We have been providing medical, nutritional and educational needs of our children. We have not lost a single child under our care. This year, we will focus on holistic development of our children,” said Shubash, co-founder and vice-president, Desire Society.

The NGO runs four programmes – Supply of supplementary nutrition through health camps, ICH (Institutional Care Homes), IEC (Information, Education, Counselling) – Knowledge-building and empowerment of infected children – and summer camps as an annual social event which are fun-based gatherings meant exclusively for children with HIV/AIDS.

Desire focuses on educating these children, helping them get employed, get married and start a family. Since HIV transmission from the parent to a child can be prevented, the organisation believes that children supported by it are eligible to get married. Desire boasts of taking care of next generation kids as well if their parents don’t survive.

One of the major impediments HIV-infected children face is the social stigma, which deprives them of school education. Once children are taken under its wings, Desire puts them under the medical observation of its healthcare team.

The children are made to take drugs regularly and on time as unless a patient takes antiretroviral therapy (ART), there are no results.

Regular counselling sessions are conducted to inculcate positive thinking in young minds. “Our aim is to work towards ensuring that no children in the country will be living a life of a HIV-positive. One of our present challenges is that we do not have our own land for the care centre. We have to pay a high rent so we are in need of funds to build a separate building for boys’ accommodation,” Mr Shubash said.