The study explores pertinent issues around a comprehensive provision of antiretroviral
drugs to HIV positive pregnant women in South Africa from a human rights
perspective. Although these drugs have been proven to significantly reduce the
transmission of HIV from a pregnant mother to her newborn baby/babies at birth, the
South African government for over five years refused to roll them out in the public
health sector. Reasons that were provided in this regard were multifaceted and have
included claims regarding their alleged toxicity, potential side effects, huge cost,
inadequate infrastructure, etc until March 2004 when it announced to start a national
rollout program.
It is in light of this that the study sets out to explore some of the key positions within
the government and amongst activist groups on the health rights of HIV positive
pregnant women, and how these different positions have evolved in response to each
other. In particular, the paper aims at examining how discourses of human rights were
employed, and how they have impacted on the Social Work discipline. It further
focuses on developing a Social Work perspective on the human rights of HIV positive
pregnant women in South Africa, thereby contributing to the discipline’s professional
value base and body of knowledge, which inform, inter alia, its advocacy role and
social action approach.
The research project was embedded in a theoretical framework often referred to as
‘standpoint research’. An archival study of local and international literature and policy
documents was conducted. This was complemented with a limited qualitative study.
Semi-structured interviews were conducted with a purposive sample of five
interviewees representing a cross-section of positions on the topic. This data was
analyzed using a three step coding procedure that allowed for categorizing,
connecting, and systematically relating the gathered data to each other and to the
reviewed literature.
The research findings indicate that the South African government’s absence of
consistency and apparent lack of political will to rollout the drugs have contributed to
the deterioration of the right of HIV positive pregnant women to access health care
services. The role of civil society organizations in helping to realize, promote and
protect the health and related human rights of this group is emphasized. It was also
found that the different strategies employed to this end speak well to Social Work’s
value base, and some of its methods and approaches to practice. Social Work is
therefore well placed to join and support those efforts of other segments of civil society
that have been investigated in this paper.
The paper concludes by making recommendations towards, inter alia, the need for the
South African government to adhere to the values enshrined in the country’s
Constitution; to work closely and transparently with different organs of civil society;
and simultaneously implement the said ARV rollout program while building and
strengthening its infrastructural capacity. The various roles Social Work could, and
should, assume with regards to improving the human rights of HIV positive pregnant
women in this regard are also highlighted.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:wits/oai:wiredspace.wits.ac.za:10539/5619 |
Date | 09 September 2008 |
Creators | Tesfamichael, Misgina Gebregiorgis |
Source Sets | South African National ETD Portal |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis |
Format | application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf |
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