| Literature DB >> 28799324 |
Patrick M Eba1,2, HyeYoung Lim3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: AIDS is a leading cause of death among adolescents in sub-Saharan Africa. Yet, legal, policy and social barriers continue to restrict their access to HIV services. In recent years, access to independent HIV testing and treatment for adolescents has gained increased attention. The 2013 WHO Guidance on HIV testing and counselling and care for adolescents living with HIV (WHO Guidance) calls for reviewing legal and regulatory frameworks to facilitate adolescents' access to comprehensive HIV services. As of 31 March 2017, some 28 countries in sub-Saharan Africa have adopted HIV-specific legislation. But there is limited understanding of the provisions of these laws on access to HIV services for adolescents and their implication on efforts to scale up HIV prevention, testing, treatment and care among this population.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescents; HIV-specific law; age; consent; evolving capacity; independent; legislation
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28799324 PMCID: PMC5577701 DOI: 10.7448/IAS.20.1.21456
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int AIDS Soc ISSN: 1758-2652 Impact factor: 5.396
HIV services and adolescents: the human rights framework
| Key human rights principles and norms | Applicable treaties and other binding instruments | General comments addressing the norm | Concluding observations (examples) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Health | UDHR Art. 25; CRC Art. 24; ICESCR Art. 12; CEDAW Art. 12; ACHPR Art. 16; ACRWC Art. 14; Maputo Protocol Art. 14 | CRC GC No. 15 (2013); CRC GC No. 4 (2003); CRC GC No. 3 (2003); CESCR GC No. 14 (2000) | “… Improve access to high-quality, age-appropriate HIV/AIDS, sexual and reproductive health services, including by providing for a minor to undergo HIV treatment on a voluntary basis without the consent of a legal administrator or guardian …” CRC, Mauritius (2015) |
| Non-discrimination | UDHR Art. 1 and 2; CRC Art. 2; ICCPR Art. 2(1) and Art. 3; ICESCR Art. 2(2) and Art. 3; CEDAW Art. 1 and 2; ACHPR Art. 2 and 18; ACHPR Art. 3; Maputo Protocol Art. 2 | CRC GC No. 4 (2003) para 2; CESCR GC No. 20 (2009); CCPR GC No. 18 (1989) | “… to eliminate stereotypes and practices that discriminate against girls …” CRC, Eritrea (2015) |
| Best interests of the child | CRC Art 3(1); ACRWC Art. 20 | CRC GC No. 14 (2013) | “… develop procedures and criteria to provide guidance to all relevant persons in authority for determining the best interests of the child in every area and for giving those interests due weight as a primary consideration …” CRC, Congo (2014) |
| Evolving capacity of the child and right to be heard and freedom of expression | UDHR Art. 19; ICCPR 19(2); CRC Art. 12(1), (2) & 13; ACHPR Art. 9(2); ACRWC Art. 7 | CRC GC No. 4 (2003); CRC GC No. 12, para 80, 81; CCPR GC No. 10 (1983) & No. 34 (2011) | “… promote and facilitate … respect for views of children and their participation in all matters affecting them in accordance with their evolving capacity”. CRC, Côte d’Ivoire (2001) |
| Education and information | ICESCR Art. 13; CRC Art. 17, 28 & 29; CEDAW 10; ACHPR Art. 9(2) & 17; Maputo Protocol Art. 12 | CRC GC No. 3 (2003) para 22; CRC GC No. 12, para 82; CESCR GC No. 22 (2016) | “… include initiatives to provide education and services to adolescents on reproductive health with information on preventing HIV/AIDS and STIs”. CRC, Guinea Bissau (2013) |
| Prohibition of harmful cultural practices | CRC Art. 24(3); CEDAW Art. 5(a); ACRWC Art. 21; Maputo Protocol Art. 5; | Joint CRC & CEDAW GC Harmful Practices | “… modify or eliminate negative cultural practices and stereotypes that are harmful to and discriminatory against, women”. CRC, Niger (2009) |
| Prohibition of torture, inhumane and degrading treatment | UDHR Art. 5; ICCPR Art. 7; CRC Art. 37(a); ACRWC Art. 16 | CRC GC No. 8 (2006); CCPR GC No. 20 (2000) | “… review its legislation in order to ensure that infliction of torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment upon children is considered as an aggravating factor”. CRC, Tunisia (2010) |
| Privacy (including confidentiality) | UDHR Art. 12; CRC Art. 16(1); ACRWC Art. 10 | CRC GC No. 4, para 7; CRC GC No. 3, para 24; CCPR GC 17 (1988) | “… provide for system of voluntary testing for HIV/AIDS with full respect for right to privacy and confidentiality”. CRC, Benin (2006) |
UDHR: Universal Declaration on Human Rights; ICCPR: International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights; ICESCR: the International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural Rights; CRC: Convention on the Rights of the Child; CEDAW, Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women; ACHPR: African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights; Maputo Protocol: Protocol to the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights on the Rights of Women in Africa; ACRWC: African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child; GC: general comment.
HIV-specific laws in sub-Saharan Africa (as of 31 March 2017)
| Country | Title of HIV-specific law |
|---|---|
| 1. Angola | ● Lei No 8/04 sobre o Virus da Immunodeficiência Humana (VIH) e a Sindroma de Immunodeficiência Adquirida (SIDA), 2004 |
| 2. Benin | ● Loi No 2005-31 du 5 Avril 2006 portant prévention, prise en charge et contrôle du VIH/SIDA, 2006 |
| 3. Burkina Faso | ● Loi No 030-2008/AN portant lutte contre le VIH/SIDA et protection des droits des personnes vivant avec le VIH/SIDA, 2008 |
| 4. Burundi | ● Loi No 1/018 du 12 Mai 2005 portant protection juridique des personnes infectées par le Virus de l’Immunodéficience Humaine et des personnes atteintes du Syndrome Immunodéficience Acquise, 2005 |
| 5. Cape Verde | ● Lei No 19/VII/2007, 2007 |
| 6. Central African Republic | ● Loi 06.030 de 2006 fixant les droits et obligations des personnes vivant avec le VIH/SIDA, 2006 |
| 7. Chad | ● Loi No 19/PR/2007 du 15 Novembre 2007 portant lutte contre VIH/SIDA/IST et protection des droits des personnes vivant avec le VIH/SIDA, 2007 |
| 8. Comoros | ● Loi N° 14-011/AU du 21 avril 2014, relative aux droits des personnes vivant avec le VIH et leur implication dans la réponse nationale, 2014 |
| 9. Congo | ● Loi No 30 - 2011 du 3 juin 2011 portant lutte contre le VIH et le SIDA et protection des droits des personnes vivant avec le VIH, 2011 |
| 10. Côte d’Ivoire | ● Loi n° 2014-430 du 14 juillet 2014 portant régime de prévention, de protection et de répression en matière de lutte contre le VIH et le SIDA, 2014 |
| 11. Democratic Republic of Congo | ● Loi No 08/011 du 14 Juillet 2008 portant protection des droits des personnes vivant avec le VIH/SIDA et des personnes affectées, 2008 |
| 12. Equatorial Guinea | ● Ley No 3/2005 sobre la prevención y la lucha contra las infecciones de transmisión sexual (ITS), el VIH/SIDA y la defensa de los derechos de las personas afectadas, 2005 |
| 13. Gambia | ● HIV and AIDS Prevention and Control Act, No 4 of 2015 |
| 14. Guinea | ● Ordonnance No 056/2009/PRG/SGG portant amendement de la loi L/2005/025/AN du 22 Novembre 2005 relative à la prévention, la prise en charge et le contrôle du VIH/SIDA en République de Guinée, 2009 |
| 15. Guinea Bissau | ● Loi n° 5/2007 du 10 septembre 2007 de la prévention, du traitement et du contrôle du VIH/sida, 2007 |
| 16. Kenya | ● HIV and AIDS Prevention and Control Act, No 14 of 2006 |
| 17. Liberia | ● An Act to Amend the Public Health Law, Title 33, Liberian Code of Laws Revised (1976) to Create New Chapter 18 Providing for the Control of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) and Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), 2010 |
| 18. Madagascar | ● Loi No 2005-040 du 20 Février 2006 sur la lutte contre le VIH/SIDA et la protection des droits des personnes vivant avec le VIH/SIDA), 2006 |
| 19. Mali | ● Loi No 6-028 du 29 Juin 2006 fixant les règles relatives à la prévention, à la prise en charge et au contrôle du VIH/SIDA, 2006 |
| 20. Mauritania | ● Loi No 2007-042 relative à la prévention, la prise en charge et le contrôle du VIH/SIDA, 2007 |
| 21. Mauritius | ● HIV and AIDS Act, No 31 of 2006 |
| 22. Mozambique | ● Lei No 19/2014 Lei de Protecçao da Pessao, do trabalhador e do Candidato e Emprego Vivendo com VIH e SIDA, 2014 |
| 23. Niger | ● Loi No 2015-30 du 26 Mai 2015 relative à la prévention, la prise en charge et le contrôle du Virus de d’Immunodéficience Humaine (HIV) |
| 24. Senegal | ● Loi n° 2010-03 du 9 avril 2010 relative au VIH/SIDA, 2010 |
| 25. Sierra Leone | ● The National HIV and AIDS Commission Act of 2011 |
| 26. Tanzania | ● HIV and AIDS (Prevention and Control) Act, No 28 of 2008 |
| 27. Togo | ● Loi No 2010-018 du 31 Décembre 2010 modifiant la loi No 2005 - 012 du 14 Décembre 2005 portant protection des personnes en matière de VIH/SIDA, 2010 |
| 28. Uganda | ● HIV Prevention and Control Act of 2014 |
Key public health recommendations relating to independent access to HIV services for adolescents in the WHO Guidance
Countries should consider best approaches within their legal and social contexts to lower the age of consent to HIV testing and counselling (p 20). Adolescents who have not reached the set age of consent but have reached sufficient level of maturity and understanding should be allowed to consent to HIV testing (p x). In the context of HIV testing and counselling, pre- and post-test counselling are critical for adolescents with or without HIV (pp 15 and 19). Adolescent services must be confidential. Disclosure should be done with the consent of the adolescent tested (p 47). Decisions concerning to whom to disclose test results should be made with the support of the provider or counsellor and a family member or friend if possible (p 47). Adolescents who legally are given the right to access HIV testing, and counselling services should also have autonomous access to HIV prevention and treatment services (p 12). |
Age of consent to HIV testing in HIV-specific laws in sub-Saharan Africa
| Age of consent to HIV testing | Countries |
|---|---|
(a) Explicit age of consent | 11 countries: Burkina Faso [ |
| 11 years | Mozambique (Article 23(3)) [ |
| 12 years | Uganda (Sections 1 and 10) [ |
| 14 years | Guinea (Article 22) [ |
| 15 years | Congo (Article 18) [ |
| 16 years | Côte d’Ivoire (Article 4) [ |
| 18 years | Burkina Faso (Article 2 & 9) [ |
(b) Reference to “minors” or “children” | 13 countries: Angola [ |
Maturity and other circumstances enabling access to HIV testing for adolescents below the age of consent in HIV-specific laws
| Maturity and other circumstances | Eight countries (Comoros, DRC, Kenya, Madagascar, Mauritius, Niger, Sierra Leone and Togo) |
|---|---|
| Sufficient maturity | Comoros (Article 18) [ |
| Emancipated minor | Comoros (Article 18) [ |
| Pregnant | Kenya (Section 14) [ |
| Married | Kenya (Section 14) [ |
| Parent | Kenya (Section 14) [ |
| At risk of HIV infection | Kenya (Section 14) [ |
| Best interest of the child requiresindependent testing | Comoros (article 18) [ |
Comparing HIV testing provisions in HIV-specific laws and national HIV testing policies in four sub-Saharan African countries
| Country | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Issue | Normative source | Burkina Faso | Chad | Kenya | Tanzania |
| Age of consent | Law | 18 years | Not available | 18 years | Refers to child (age not defined in HIV law) |
| Policy | 18 years | Refers to minor (not defined) [ | 15 years [ | 18 years [ | |
| Maturity and other circumstances for independent access for adolescents below the set age of consent | Law | Not available | Not available | Below 18:
– Pregnant – Married – Parent – At risk of HIV infection | Not available |
| Policy | 15–18 years if: | Not available | Below 15 years if: | Below 18 if: | |
Provisions on independent HIV testing, counselling and treatment for children in South Africa