Main site navigation

Report

 

Authors
Bhana, Deevia and Farhana Farook Brixen, with Glenda Mac Naughton and Robert Zimmerman
Title
Young Children, HIV/AIDS and Gender: A Summary Review
In
Working Papers in Early Childhood Development: Young children and HIV/AIDS sub-series
Description of Work
Working Paper 39
Imprint
Bernard van Leer Foundation, The Hague, August 2006, 64 pp
ISBN/ISSN
90-6195-092-9/1383-7907
Url
http://www.bernardvanleer.org/publication_store/publication_store_publications /young_children_hivaids_and_gender_a_summary_reviewfile
Abstract

"Studies point to the existence of a global HIV/AIDS emergency among young people. An estimated 6,000 youths a day become infected, an average of one new infection every 14 seconds.

The most socially and economically disadvantaged young people appear to be especially at risk of infection, and young women in developing contexts are at the greatest risk. The rate of HIV infection among girls is rapidly outstripping the rate among boys. Girls already account for nearly 60 percent of the infections in sub-Saharan Africa, where the pandemic is most virulent.

This paper adopts the hypothesis that this pandemic can be confronted already in early childhood. During the first eight years of life the foundations are set for the capacities, beliefs and attitudes that support individuals later in life.

In early childhood, people can therefore more easily learn and integrate appropriate risk avoidance behaviours that may prove useful in the global war on HIV/AIDS. The earliest years may represent a window of opportunity for the successful implementation of HIV/AIDS reduction and prevention programmes."

Related Entries

Topics