Audio By Carbonatix
The Timber and Woodworkers’ Union (TWU) of the Trades Union Congress (TUC), has appealed for the formulation of HIV/AIDS policies and their inclusion into the collective bargaining agreements of workers.
The Union said this would help eliminate discrimination and stigmatization of persons infected with the disease, at their workplaces.
Mr Joshua Ansah, General Secretary of the TWU, made the appeal at a three-day workshop on HIV/AIDS, organized by the Union for workers of the Forestry Commission, drawn from the three northern regions, at Tamale, on Monday.
The workshop was funded by the Bill Morris Testimonial Fund on HIV/AIDS in Africa through the British Trades Union Congress.
Mr Ansah noted that since HIV/AIDS was diagnosed about 25 years ago, the disease had claimed over 25 million lives with about 40 million people being affected.
“HIV/AIDS has ceased to be a mere medical or health crisis,” he noted.
“It has turned into a major humanitarian and developmental crisis, threatening to reverse many development gains.”
He said HIV/AIDS had become a daunting problem requiring a multi-pronged approach, and stressed that a workplace programme that focused on HIV/AIDS could make a difference to the individual worker and the company.
“A healthy workforce is necessary for productivity and profitability,” Mr. Ansah said.
Mr Daniel Owusu Boatey, Project Coordinator of the workshop, said the HIV/AIDS pandemic threatened the fundamental objectives of the labour movement since workers infected with the disease faced discriminatory attitudes and practices from co-workers and employers.
He said though most workers did not stand the risk of infection by the nature of their work, some still faced the risk of exposure through their work and for such the disease was a health and safety issue.
He said the Unions must, therefore, try to protect the access to medical benefits and the right to remain at work for as long as the worker was physically able.
Mr Boatey said a national sentinel survey from 2003 to 2007 portrayed that the reproductive age bracket between ages 15 to 49 were those at risk in contracting HIV/AIDS.
He said the outreach programme being embarked on by the Union would contribute to the prevention and spread of the disease through the dissemination of information and advice on risk of infection, voluntary counselling and testing, and access to treatment, care and support for workers living with the disease.
Source: GNA
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Indian billionaires buy foreign companies as growth slows at home
1 hour -
Mexico to host Iran for FIFA World Cup 2026
1 hour -
Absa Bank Ghana empowers businesses to navigate market risks
2 hours -
Moroccan Sahara: The preeminence and relevance of the autonomy plan highlighted in Verona
2 hours -
FIFA non-affliation and disclaimer notice
2 hours -
2026 World Cup: Baba Rahman, Mumin and Nuamah return as Black Stars name provisional squad
2 hours -
Bryan Acheampong to donate 50 computers to UniMAC students after AI lecture pledge
2 hours -
Injured Davies set to miss Canada World Cup opener
2 hours -
University of Ghana to launch global alumni network app to reconnect graduates
2 hours -
MTN celebrates Africa Day with renewed push for digital inclusion and youth empowerment
2 hours -
Mahama’s African Games forensic audit reveals over $40m in financial irregularities
3 hours -
Russia threatens more Kyiv strikes and tells foreign nationals to leave
3 hours -
I don’t wish NDC well; they’ve become a menace – Miracles Aboagye on NDC internal tensions
3 hours -
Oil prices slide on hopes of US-Iran peace deal
4 hours -
John Mahama receives customized set of golf clubs ahead of 2026 Head of State Invitational Tournament
4 hours