Audio By Carbonatix
The Tema Metro Tuberculosis and Human Immunodeficiency Virus (TB/HIV) Coordinator, Ms. Joanna Anorkor Lartey, has described as worrying the trend of some HIV-positive mothers refusing to give the prophylaxis medication to their babies.
Ms. Lartey, in an interview with the Ghana News Agency in Tema ahead of World AIDS Day, said such an act could lead to uninfected babies contracting the virus from their positive mothers.
She said that as part of the HIV prevention programme in the country, pregnant women undergo a compulsory test to prevent mother-to-child transmission (perinatal transmission).
She added that when tested positive, the child born to the mother will be put on antiretroviral prophylaxis to prevent the virus from being transmitted to the child.
She, however, disclosed that checks from her outfit showed that some of the mothers do not give the medications to the babies for fear of stigmatisation.
“Some of them, because after birth they stay with others, such as in-laws, find it difficult to give the medication to the babies to avoid disclosing their status to others,” she said.
The TB/HIV Coordinator indicated that to ensure that the babies received the medication at birth, the midwives in the various facilities in the metropolis should make the medication available to the mothers at 34 weeks of gestation to add to their preparation for delivery.
She said the free medicine is given to the babies right after birth, even before breastfeeding, to protect them from the virus that could have passed from the mother to the child during pregnancy and childbirth.
Meanwhile, a total of 82 pregnant women tested HIV positive in 2022 on their first visit, while 11 more were also found positive when tested at 34 weeks of gestation for the same year.
For the first half of 2023, 32 of the pregnant women tested positive at the initial stage, while 26 came out positive at 34 weeks of their pregnancy.
Ms. Lartey disclosed that 149 women in the Tema Metropolis who had already tested positive for HIV were recorded at antenatal clinics between January and June 2023.
Latest Stories
-
“I am strengthened by Psalm 118 vs 22” – Bawumia highlights cornerstone verse
2 minutes -
Ledzokuku South Circuit triumphs in maiden Ga language competition as officials push cultural revival
6 minutes -
Government deepens private sector partnerships to tackle housing deficit
7 minutes -
T-bills auction: Government records 253% oversubscription; interest rates fall to 8.6%.
18 minutes -
AGI pushes for cocoa processing plants in growing areas to boost value addition
18 minutes -
Luv FM and The Crush Bar create great Vals Day vibes for couples
20 minutes -
A/R: Three schools support KATH Blood Bank in MTN-sponsored donation drive
23 minutes -
Over 1,600 parcels of suspected narcotics intercepted in three separate operations
28 minutes -
Ghana to become Africa’s 8th biggest economy in 2026
33 minutes -
Bawumia urges NPP members forgive eachother and move past campaign disagreements
36 minutes -
Teacher Trainees’ Association welcomes suspension of CETAG strike, calls for renewed commitment
45 minutes -
Motorbike raids on villages kill dozens in Nigeria
52 minutes -
UK wants action taken on Russia after Navalny frog poisoning, Cooper says
52 minutes -
Ukraine’s ex-energy minister detained while attempting to leave country
53 minutes -
Bekwai MP opposes creation of 24-Hour Economy Secretariat; advises Gov’t to use the money to pay cocoa farmers instead.
55 minutes
